ABSTRACT

Over the last 30 years referendums have played an increasingly important role in determining government policy. Recent high profile referendums in Scotland, Catalonia and Ukraine have continued the movement towards independence referendums following decolonization and the end of the Cold War. The Greek bailout referendum and Britain’s vote on membership of the EU reflect a tradition of European states giving their people a direct say in the transfer of sovereign powers to the European Union seen through the ratification of key treaties such as Maastricht, Amsterdam, Nice and Lisbon. This Routledge Handbook covers key aspects and issues of direct democracy and referendums throughout the world including:

•their history;

•when, why, where, how and on which issues referendums are held;

•why some referendums are more democratic than others;

•how referendums are won;

•whether they produce good policies;

•if referendums increase participation and improve the quality of representative democracies;

•do referendums increase trust in democracy and the political actors;

•the impact of new technology on the possibilities, methods and frequency of direct public political participation;

•how they should be regulated.

Covering other related areas such as recall, citizen juries and random selection, this compendium is an indispensable guide to referendums and the workings of modern democracy.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part I|79 pages

The history and variety of referendums

chapter 3|21 pages

Local referendums

A comparative assessment of forms and practice

chapter 4|7 pages

Methodological issues

Popper, paradigms and historical perspectives on referendum research – a case of pluralism

part II|58 pages

The politics of referendums

chapter 5|16 pages

Views on referendums

Is there a pattern?

chapter 6|16 pages

Why referendums?

On appearances and absences

chapter 7|24 pages

Referendums and consensus democracy

Empirical findings from 21 EU countries

part III|139 pages

The democratic quality of referendums

chapter 8|20 pages

The democratic criticism of referendums

The majority and true will of the people

chapter 9|23 pages

The democratic potential of referendums

Intrinsic and extrinsic limitations

chapter 10|18 pages

Democratic credentials and deficits of referendums

A case study of the Scottish independence vote

chapter 11|17 pages

Sovereignty referendums

People concerned and people entitled to vote

chapter 12|20 pages

The correct expression of popular will

Does the wording of a referendum question matter?

chapter 13|13 pages

The expression of popular will

Do campaigns matter and how do voters decide?

chapter 14|11 pages

The strength of popular will

Legal impact, implementation and duration

chapter 15|15 pages

Existing regulations and recommended best practices

The example of the USA

part IV|81 pages

Voting at referendums

chapter 17|16 pages

Picking winners

Forecasting the results of EU referendums 1972–2016

chapter 18|11 pages

The formation of opinions at referendums

The application of the screening theory model

chapter 19|14 pages

Are referendums a mechanism to turn our prejudices into rational choices?

An unfortunate answer from sociophysics

part V|79 pages

Policy and political effects of referendums

chapter 22|17 pages

Referendums on European integration

Crisis solving or crisis inducing?

chapter 23|14 pages

Do referendums make better citizens?

The effects of direct democracy on political interest, civic competence and participation

chapter 24|14 pages

Brinkmanship and backsliding

How governments deal with referendum decisions

chapter 25|15 pages

Effects of referendums on party cohesion and cleavages

Empirical findings from 21 EU countries

part VI|62 pages

Related direct democratic institutions

chapter 26|13 pages

Recall referendum around the world

Origins, institutional designs and current debates

chapter 28|16 pages

Nothing fails like success

Teledemocracy and deliberative polling