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79 Nat'l Civic Rev. 1 (1990)

handle is hein.journals/natmnr79 and id is 1 raw text is: 

          NATIONAL CIVIC REVIEW
            Building  Successful  Communities

Volume   79, Number 1             January-February 1990

                VOTING PATTERNS AND
         ALTERNATIVE ELECTORAL SYSTEMS


When  the first issue of the REVIEW rolled off the press in 1912, the
League's reform agenda was just beginning to acquire support and
influence. A central feature of turn-of-the-century refrom was the
nonpartisan, at-large election of the local policy-making body.
Today, except in our largest jurisdictions, nonpartisanship is an
assumed  feature of local elections. Since the 1960s, however, the
at-large system, originally promoted in part as  a remedy  to
parochial party machine influence, has been increasingly under
fire. This issue of the REVIEW questions the effectiveness of our
approach to representational redress: by and large, the imposition
of the single-member district. Solutions to the problem of fair
representation may be found in both structure-alternative elec-
toral systems-and  governance, which implies cooperation under
existing conditions.

Editor's Comment..................................................................3

Voting  Patterns in a Tri-Ethic Community:
Conflict or Cohesion?
by Charles  S. Bullock and Susan  A. MacManus................. 5
Observation of intergroup conflict and cohesion with regard to city council
elections in Austin, Texas over a ten-year period suggests that while
blacks and Hispanics often share candidate preferences, the politics are
not universally minority versus white. As our communities become
more ethnically and racially diverse-whether central or suburban-the
importance of building coalitions cannot be overstated. The frequency
and degree to which blacks, whites and browns coalesce to support the
same candidate has implications for the possibility and effectiveness of
rainbow coalitions.

Alternative Local Electoral Systems
byJosephF.   Zimmerman..................................................23
In the absence of ideality, communities-and indeed Congress and the
Justice Department-have taken action to enhance the representative-
ness of local policy-making bodies. In spite ofwidespread preference for
the single-member district over the at-large system in communities where
inequitable representation can be historically demonstrated, electoral
reformers have other options with proven track records. This article
reviews the various electoral systems with which communities have
experimented during this century and offers some alternatives to winner
takes all.

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