Commissioned Ridings

Designing Canada's Electoral Districts

Description

Where did the idea for nonpartisan constituency redistributions come from? What were the principal reasons that Canada turned to arm's-length commissions to design its electoral districts? In Commissioned Ridings John Courtney addresses these questions by examining and assessing the readjustment process in Canada's electoral boundaries. Defining electoral districts as "representational building blocks," Courtney compares federal and provincial electoral readjustments in the last half of the twentieth century, showing how parliamentarians and legislators, boundary commissions, courts, and interested members of the general public debated representational principles to define the purposes of electoral redistricting in an increasingly urban, ethnically mixed federal state such as Canada.

Reviews

"Courtney is a master craftsperson. Commissioned Ridings is the definitive work on how electoral boundaries are drawn in Canada. There is no other book like it that treats the Canadian experience in such a comprehensive and definitive fashion. It was a joy to read." Andrew Sancton, author of Merger Mania: The Assault on Local Government ----- "Commissioned Ridings is exhaustive, comprehensive, synthetic, and balanced. It is authoritative and there is nothing else comparable. It is a benchmark performance of political science work that is intrinsically valuable." Jennifer Smith, Department of Political Science, Dalhousie University