Guidelines to Assist National Minority
Participation in the Electoral Process
Page: 19
compensate for any disproportionality produced by the district seat results. The single member
districts ensure that voters have geographical representation.
Another mixed system is called the parallel system. Like the MMP system, it combines the single
member system with the PR system. But under this system, the PR seats are not used to compensate
for any disproportionality. The PR seats are allocated in accordance with the number of votes in
favour of the political party. These votes are determined either by counting the votes in favour of the
political parties that have fielded candidates in the single district elections or by a second vote.
Examples of countries using parallel systems are Albania, Armenia, Croatia, Georgia, Russia and
Lithuania.
Option 2:
Proportional representation systems, where a political party’s share in the
national vote is reflected in its share of the legislative seats, may assist in
the representation of minorities.
The list PR system is the most prevalent form of PR and the most common electoral system choice
amongst OSCE countries. Under this system, each party submits a list of candidates to the electorate
and voters therefore vote for a party as opposed to an individual candidate. This system is applied in
numerous states, e.g., Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Croatia, Spain, Portugal and Romania. The more
proportional an electoral system, the more it allows minorities, even dispersed ones, to be represented
in an elected body, at least if the threshold is met. The proportional system in Finland allows the
Swedish minority, which is in the majority only on the Aland Islands, to be represented by its own list
in three other constituencies. It also has a seat in a further constituency through alliances with other
parties.
This system has a number of clear advantages:
• it delivers highly proportional election results. The number of votes won are proportional to
the number of seats gained.
• it is relatively invulnerable to gerrymandering, mal-apportionment and other forms of
manipulation of results by the manipulation of electoral boundaries.
• it is relatively simple for both voters and electoral officials.
• because of its high levels of proportionality, list PR systems are often favoured as being the
most likely to ensure the representation of even small minorities.
It should be noted that list PR may have the effect of entrenching ethnic politics, rather than work to
encourage inter-ethnic alliances. The experience of list PR in post-Dayton Bosnia is a good example
of how proportionality alone will not encourage accommodation. In Bosnia, groups are represented in
parliament in proportion to their numbers in the community as a whole. But because parties can rely
exclusively on the votes of members of their own community for their electoral success, there is little
incentive for them to accommodate on ethnic issues. In fact, the incentives work in the other direction.
Because it is easy to mobilise support by playing the “ethnic card”, the major parties in Bosnia have
every incentive to emphasise ethnic issues and sectarian appeals. Bosnia’s 1996 elections were
effectively an ethnic census, with electors voting along ethnic lines and each of the major nationalist
parties gaining support almost exclusively from their own ethnic group. In the case of Bosnia, this
electoral system not only promoted ethnic mobilisation, but served to encourage the most extreme
elements within those ethnic groups.