2 Matching Annotations
- Nov 2022
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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Other countries do things differently.Canada has undertaken steady changes to improve its election system. In 1920, the country put federal elections under the control of an independent official who does not report to any government or politicians and who has the power to punish rule breakers. Responsibility for setting electoral boundaries was turned over to 10 similarly independent commissions, one for every province, in 1964.Taiwan and more than a dozen countries have also established independent bodies to draw voting districts and ensure that votes are cast and counted uniformly and fairly.The approach is not foolproof. Nigeria, Pakistan and Jordan all have independent election commissions. Many of their elections have still failed to be free and trusted.But in the places where studies show that turnout and satisfaction with the process are highest, elections are run by national bodies designed to be apolitical and inclusive. More than 100 countries have some form of compulsory or automatic voter registration; in general, democracies have been making it easier to vote in recent years, not more difficult.
Notice the structural-solutionism. Structure is important but what ails the US is cultural (ontological) - though structure may exacerbate it.
As evidenced by the exceptions they then list. See Putnam on Italy.
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- Mar 2022
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www.evolutionarymanifesto.com www.evolutionarymanifesto.com
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The role of governance in organizing cooperation
And it seems like we are going for structural solutionism i.e. we will solve free rider by governance ...
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