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The impacts of extra-territorial voting: Swings,interregnums and feedback effects in New Zealand elections from 1914 to 2011
Institution:1. School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, Newcastle University, England, NE1 7RU, UK;2. School of Education, Communication and Language Sciences, Newcastle University, England, NE1 7RU, UK
Abstract:How are elections affected by the votes of people living abroad? The majority of states now allow extra-territorial voting in some form, but the research literature on this topic remains underdeveloped. Moreover, even though extra-territorial voting raises issues about the relationship between territory and political obligation that are relevant to political geographers, political geography has been under-represented in discussions on the topic. Against this background, this research examines a century of overseas voting impacts in New Zealand, a country with an unusually long recorded history of such activity. The study identifies three types of extra-territorial voting impact over the period 1914-2011, referred to as swings, interregnums and feedback effects.
Keywords:Extra-territorial voting  Political transnationalism  New Zealand  Migration  Swings  Interregnums  Feedback effects
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