Conservation of Balance in the Size of Parties
2005; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 11; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1177/1354068805051778
ISSN1460-3683
Autores Tópico(s)Media Influence and Politics
ResumoFor parties of unequal seat shares ( s i ), the widely used effective number of parties ( N = 1/Σ s i 2 ) offers an equivalent in equal-sized parties, but it needs a supplement to express the imbalance in actual shares. This is akin to supplementing the mean with the standard deviation. A suitable ‘index of balance’ is b = -log s 1 /log p, where s 1 is the largest share and p is the number of seat-winning parties. It can range from 0 (utter imbalance) to 1 (perfect equality of all parties). In most individual countries, the median balance is between 0.4 and 0.6, and the worldwide median balance is close to 0.50 for any number of seat-winning parties except 2, in line with a simple logical model. Independent of electoral systems used, a rule of conservation emerges: the median product of the largest party’s fractional share and the square root of the number of seat-winning parties is conserved: s 1 p 0.5 = 1. The worldwide median for 603 elections is within 2 percent of 1.00.
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