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25 Apr

2016 Cadario Visiting Faculty Lecture featuring Pippa Norris

April 25, 2016 | By |

Would electoral reform strengthen electoral integrity? The Canadian debate in comparative perspective.

Few things are more central to the effective functioning of democracies than citizens’ faith in the fairness of the process whereby they elect their representatives – from voter registration, through the design of electoral systems to the conduct of campaigns. In elections in many parts of the world, including established democracies like Canada, that faith has been strained in recent years. In Canada, one response has been to call into question the practice of electing representatives in single-member districts on a first-past-the-post basis.

Would the integrity of the electoral process be served by changing Canada’s voting system? What does experience in other nations tell us? How can we ensure that Canadian elections function as true engines of democracy? Professor Pippa Norris, Director of the Electoral Integrity Project, will answer these and related questions at this critical moment in Canadian history, as legislators prepare recommendations to Parliament that may alter the electoral system that Canada has known since Confederation.

Following her lecture, Professor Norris will sit down with Jennifer Ditchburn, Editor-in-Chief, of Policy Options to discuss her remarks in a live on-stage interview.

Admission is free by registration and open to the public

This event is possible because of the generous support of Paul Cadario, SPPG Advisory Board member and Senior Fellow at U of T.