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Electoral Systems, Political Career Paths and Legislative Behavior: Evidence from South Korea's Mixed-Member System1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2010

HAE-WON JUN
Affiliation:
Institute of Foreign Affairs and National Security, IFANShwjun10@mofat.go.kr
SIMON HIX
Affiliation:
London School of Economics, LSE

Abstract

A growing literature looks at how the design of the electoral system shapes the voting behavior of politicians in parliaments. Existing research tends to confirm that in mixed-member systems the politicians elected in the single-member districts are more likely to vote against their parties than the politicians elected on the party lists. However, we find that in South Korea, the members of the Korean National Assembly who were elected on PR lists are more likely to vote against their party leadership than the members elected in single-member districts (SMDs). This counterintuitive behavior stems from the particular structure of candidate selection and politicians' career paths. This suggests that any theory of how electoral systems shape individual parliamentary behavior needs to look beyond the opportunities provided by the electoral rules for voters to reward or punish individual politicians (as opposed to parties), to the structure of candidate selection inside parties and the related career paths of politicians.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2010

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