Title of article :
On the Justifiability of Compulsory Voting: Reply to Lever
Author/Authors :
Hill، Liesi نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
Annabelle Lever’s thought-provoking article rests on three broad claims that I dispute, partly on
conceptual and partly on empirical grounds. Her first claim is that low and declining turnout is not
especially worrying. This encompasses the implication that socio-economic disparities in turnout are
not significant and the claims that high turnout does not confer greater legitimacy on the outcome
of elections and that abstention connotes consent and even participation. Her second claim is
that there is nothing special about voting as a means for self-government. This encompasses the
suggestion that ‘the consequences of voting are too uncertain for voting to be a necessary implication
of our duties’. Her third claim is that ‘voluntary political participation’ is a defining value of
democracy that is ‘undercut’ by requiring people to vote. This encompasses the claim that the harms
of failure to vote do not justify compelling people to vote and the assumption that there exists a
‘right’ not to vote.1 I address each of these arguments in turn.
IS
Journal title :
British Journal of Political Science
Journal title :
British Journal of Political Science