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| Electoral System Analysis× | Effective Number of Parties× | |
|---|---|---|
| Field | Political Economy | Political Economy |
| Family | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Year of origin≠ | 1954 | 1979 |
| Originator≠ | Maurice Duverger; Arend Lijphart; Rein Taagepera & Matthew Shugart | Markku Laakso & Rein Taagepera |
| Type≠ | Comparative institutional analysis framework | Descriptive index of party-system fragmentation |
| Seminal source≠ | Duverger, M. (1954). Political Parties: Their Organization and Activity in the Modern State. Wiley. ISBN: 9780416683202 | Laakso, M., & Taagepera, R. (1979). Effective Number of Parties: A Measure with Application to West Europe. Comparative Political Studies, 12(1), 3-27. DOI ↗ |
| Aliases≠ | Electoral Systems Analysis, Analysis of Electoral Rules, Votes-to-Seats Analysis | Laakso-Taagepera Index, ENEP and ENPP, Effective Number of Parties Index, ENP |
| Related≠ | 3 | 2 |
| Summary≠ | Electoral system analysis examines how the rules for translating votes into seats shape the proportionality of representation and the format of the party system. Maurice Duverger's 1954 work established the foundational propositions — that single-member plurality tends toward two-party competition while proportional representation favors multipartism — through the joint operation of a mechanical effect (how the seat-allocation rule itself distorts the vote) and a psychological effect (how voters and elites anticipate that rule and behave strategically). Rein Taagepera and Matthew Shugart (1989) put the field on a quantitative footing by showing how district magnitude and other parameters systematically determine outcomes, and Arend Lijphart (1994) provided the major comparative study of disproportionality and party systems across democracies. The method reads electoral rules as a powerful, designed lever over the structure of political competition. | The effective number of parties is the standard measure of party-system fragmentation, introduced by Markku Laakso and Rein Taagepera in 1979. Rather than simply counting how many parties exist, it weights each party by its relative size, so that a handful of dominant parties count for more than a long tail of negligible ones. Formally it is the reciprocal of the Herfindahl concentration of party shares: N equals one divided by the sum of squared shares. Computed on vote shares it yields the effective number of electoral parties (ENEP); computed on seat shares it yields the effective number of parliamentary parties (ENPP). The index gives a single, intuitive number — roughly the count of equally sized parties that would produce the observed concentration — and is the workhorse for describing and comparing party systems. |
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