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Political Science Public Affairs & Administration

The Canadian House of Commons

Representation

by (author) Norman Ward

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Apr 2019
Category
Public Affairs & Administration, General, Political Parties
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781487584931
    Publish Date
    Apr 2019
    List Price
    $46.95

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Description

A STUDY of representation in a democratic legislature must be directed towards actual membership of the legislature and towards laws and practices governing the selection of members. The electoral system must be broadly viewed as embodying the devices by which constituencies are established and altered, the franchise which determines the extent of the electorate, and the provisions which are intended to control corrupt campaign tactics and otherwise prevent perversions of representation.

 

The first few decades after Confederation were years of bitter struggle over election laws. The result was that genuine reform of the electoral machinery in the public interest was a literal impossibility until well after the turn of the century. That honesty in elections became possible, and even profitable, was the result at least as much of forces beyond the reach of legislative enactment as of positive federal policies conscientiously adopted and administered.

 

The chronicle of this development, as it can be observed in several major sections of the electoral system, follows in these pages. In the first chapter the general nature of representation is discussed. The alteration of constituency boundaries after each decennial census is analysed in Part I. Membership in the legislature is examined in Part II. Part III covers the electoral machinery, both in its narrow aspect as a technique by which members of Parliament are returned, and in a broader sense as a large organization which includes the franchise, electoral corruption, and election expenses. Part IV comprises the conclusion.

About the author

NORMAN WARD, a graduate of McMaster University, and with further degrees from the University of Toronto, was a Professor in the Department of Economics and Political Science at the University of Saskatchewan. He served with the Royal Commission on Provincial Development and Rehabilitation, Nova Scotia, 1943-4, and had frequently been chairman of boards of conciliation in labour disputes. His previous publications include The Canadian House of Commons: Representation; Government in Canada; and Mice in the Beer. The latter won the Leacock Medal for Humour in 1960.

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