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Increasing Electoral Turnout Among the Young: Compulsory Voting or Financial Incentives?
[journal article]
Abstract Low electoral turnout has led to a vicious circle for which the young do not vote and vote-seeking politicians ignore their needs. A powerful method is needed to address this in both the short-term and long-term. I consider two such methods: compulsory voting and a scheme of financial incentives for... view more
Low electoral turnout has led to a vicious circle for which the young do not vote and vote-seeking politicians ignore their needs. A powerful method is needed to address this in both the short-term and long-term. I consider two such methods: compulsory voting and a scheme of financial incentives for young voters. The financial incentive scheme that I consider would pay young people £30 if they attend an hour-long information session on the election, an hour-long discussion session, and then vote. I argue that my proposed financial incentive scheme is preferable to compulsory voting because it is more likely to lead young people to deliver reasoned, quality votes than compulsory voting, and it does not violate individual liberty.... view less
Keywords
voting behavior; justice; voter turnout; Intergenerational relations; suffrage; young adult; young voter; election research; political interest
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
compulsory voting
Document language
English
Publication Year
2016
Journal
Intergenerational Justice Review, 2 (2016) 1
Issue topic
Low Electoral Turnout among Young Voters
DOI
https://doi.org/10.24357/igjr.8.1.448
ISSN
2190-6335
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed