Methods of apportionment —
Español
 

Consolidated Replies
Back to Workspace

Methods of apportionment

Methods of apportionment

Facilitator - Stina Larserud , 2007 Febrero 09 16:44

This question was posed by an ACE user through the "Ask a question" function in Electoral Advice.


Original question:

I am looking for information about the methods used to allocate seats - not to parties after the election but - to the geographical areas in the country and the electoral districts before the election to guarantee fair representation of the voters in each district.

My question is: Is there any type of country comparative database with this information, or are there case studies on particular countries I could get access to?


Many thanks beforehand.

Standard Divisor for Apportionment

Standard Quota for Apportionment

Summary of responses:

Posted on 21 March, 2007

Most of the literature about apportionment is related to the American election regulations and court cases on the fairness and constitutionality of different apportionment methods. There is to our knowledge no comparative database on the actual apportionment formulas of seats; but for a wider discussion on apportionment and reapportionment rules and practice there is a number of sources available. One book which covers many aspects of boundary delimitation in the United Kingdom in considerable depth as well as provides some comparative data from Australia, Canada, France, Germany, India, New Zealand and the United States is “Fixing the Boundaries: Defining and Redefining Single-Member Electoral Districts” by Iain McLean and David Butler from 1996. Please also find links to documents and reports both on the mathematical and political side of apportionment including country case studies.


Replies were received, with thanks, from:

  • Toby Moore
  • Thomas Dackweiler


Links to related resources:


Quote from the ACE Encyclopaedia on apportionment:

"There are usually two phases in the electoral district delimitation process. The first phase is the allocation, or apportionment, of seats in the legislature to regional entities such as states or provinces. This is usually a very mechanical process, with the number of seats assigned to each state or province usually dependent on the relative population of that state or province. In countries that do not delimit single-member districts, the reallocation of seats, or reapportionment, is the only step taken to equalize population across electoral districts."


Individual responses in full below:

Re: Methods of apportionment

Toby Moore, 2007 Febrero 27 21:06

The US has produced a sizeable literature on the mathematics of apportionment, since it turns out that there are various formulae one can apply, and the US has experimented with several different ones in apportioning seats in its House of Representatives to the individual states.  There is also a lengthy body of legal opinions, most recently when Utah "lost" a seat to North Carolina due in part to the fact that Mormon missionaries operating overseas are not counted for apportionment purposes while armed forces personnel are (and NC has a large number of military).  There is an interesting roundup of the math here.

The larger question, of course, regards the sorts of modifications that countries place on the apportionment process, to guarantee regions a certain minimum number of seats, for example.  This is commonly done, in Canada for example, and the UK.  I don't know of a database with cross-national comparisons, although there is an academic literature relating to varying ways of apportioning seats.

Re: Methods of apportionment

Thomas Dackweiler, 2007 Marzo 05 19:10

As you for sure know, in some election laws like in Germany the geographical and electoral districts should be the same. If we talk about fair representation it is of course a question about the size and the numbers of voters on one district. If you would like to guarantee that some people (minorities etc.) in all cases shall get a seat, that I think you need to write this down before. We have this case in one state in the north of Germany, where  the Danish minority gets in all cases 3 seats in the parliament. And in 2000 they had special arrangements for the Serbs in the first parliament of Kosovo.


THANKS TO ALL WHO HAVE CONTRIBUTED!

The
opinions expressed by members of the ACE Practitioners' Network do not
necessarily reflect those of the ACE Partner organizations.
 
ACE PRACTITIONERS' NETWORK

Creado con Ploneboard
Acciones de Documento