Direct Democratic Choice

The Swiss Experience

By (author) Hanspeter Kriesi

Publication date:

17 October 2005

Length of book:

252 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

236x152mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780739109656

Direct Democratic Choice sets out to understand how the citizens actually decide in direct-democratic votes. Author Hanspeter Kriesi has analyzed nearly twenty years of post-election surveys in Switzerland (1981-1999), which he has contextualized according to the various political issues and the relevant arguments provided by the political elites. This book's core argument is that the citizens who participate in direct-democratic votes make competent choices. Kriesi's extensive empirical research shows that the majority of these voters arrive at their decisions on the basis of arguments about the advantages and disadvantages of the available options. The less competent and less interested citizens either do not vote or, if they do, employ heuristic shortcuts allowing them to make approximately reasonable decisions. Kriesi provides strong support for an optimistic view of direct-democratic decision-making but also indicates that this process, wherever it occurs, can be improved by proper institutional design and by appropriate strategies enacted by the political elite.
A fascinating book based on an original data set by a leading scholar on Swiss democracy. Well worth reading.