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How Democratic are Australia's elections?    (published: 5/2004)
   posted: 1/09/2004
Author(s): Marian Sawer (Australian National University)
Category: Electoral; - Breaking news/external links
Audit team member Marian Sawer's article, 'How democratic are our elections?', published in the Australian Review of Public Affairs (formerly The Drawing Board).

Democratic Audit of Australia    (published: 9/2004)
   posted: 1/09/2004
Author(s): Brett Bowden (Australian National University)
Category: - Breaking news/external links
Brett Bowden's 'Auditors move in on Australian Democracy and find no room for complacency', published in On Line Opinion: Australia’s e-journal of social and political debate, is a brief overview of the Democratic Audit’s aims and achievements.

Report no. 3: Corruption and democracy in Australia    (published: 8/2004)
   posted: 12/08/2004
Author(s): Barry Hindess (Australian National University)
Category: Focussed Audits; Political Finance/Govt Advertising; Accountability      (pages: 82)  
Barry Hindess from the Democratic Audit Team notes in his detailed study, Corruption and Democracy in Australia, that corruption 'is a more substantial problem than Australia’s impressive performance on conventional international measures would seem to indicate'.

The voting rights of prisoners    (published: 7/2004)
   posted: 4/07/2004
Author(s): Brian Costar (Monash University)
Category: Felon disenfranchisement; - Breaking news/external links
Brian Costar of the School of Political and Social Inquiry at Monash University, argues in Australian Policy Online that in restricting the voting rights of prisoners, the Senate has undermined a fundamental democratic principle.
Postscript: The Labor Party's amendment on prisoner franchise proved to be unworkable, requiring new legislation. Under the Electoral and Referendum Amendment (Prisoner Voting and Other Measures) Act of August 2004 prisoners serving a sentence of three years or more will be disenfranchised.
See also Rick Hasen's audit paper 'Ending Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States: Litigation or Legislation?'

A senator for expat Australians    (published: 7/2004)
   posted: 1/07/2004
Author(s): Andrew Leigh (Australian National University)
Category: Electoral; Parliament; - Audit paper      (pages: 3)  
Andrew Leigh, a recently returned expat now calling the Economics Program in the Research School of Social Sciences at the ANU home, proposes that expatriate Australians should have their own Senator to represent their interests (PDF).

Electronic voting in the ACT    (published: 7/2004)
   posted: 1/07/2004
Author(s): Phillip Green (ACT Electoral Commissioner)
Category: Electoral; - Audit paper      (pages: 4)  
Phillip Green, the Australian Capital Territory Electoral Commissioner, reflects on the ACT experience with electronic voting (PDF).

Public sector board appointments    (published: 7/2004)
   posted: 1/07/2004
Author(s): Meredith Edwards (University of Canberra)
Category: Public service/statutory bodies; - Audit paper; Accountability
Meredith Edwards of the National Institute of Governance at the University of Canberra considers appointments to public sector boards in Australia and identifies opportunities for reform drawing on experiences from abroad.

Contact between Australian MPs and their constituents     (published: 6/2004)
   posted: 1/06/2004
Author(s): Pipa Norris (Harvard University)
Category: Public opinion; Electoral; - Audit paper
Pippa Norris of Harvard University and a Member of the Democratic Audit of Australia's International Advisory Committee, asks: 'Are Australian MPs in touch with constituents?' One of the most important features of representative democracy is the strength of the linkages between citizens and elected representatives. It is commonly thought that the electoral system, particularly the ballot structure used when citizens cast a vote, plays an important role in this process.

Above-the-line voting—How democratic?    (published: 6/2004)
   posted: 1/06/2004
Author(s): Marian Sawer (Australian National University)
Category: Electoral; - Audit paper
Audit team member Marian Sawer's article, 'How democratic are our elections?', published in the Australian Review of Public Affairs (formerly The Drawing Board).

Australia's first bill of rights    (published: 4/2004)
   posted: 1/06/2004
Author(s): George Williams (University of New South Wales)
Category: Rights; - Audit paper
George Williams follows-up his commentary on the pros and cons of a Bill of Rights by commenting on Australia's first Bill of Rights, as passed by the ACT Legislative Assembly. Coming into force in the Australian Capital Territory on 1 July 2004, the ACT Bill of Rights will be known as the Human Rights Act.


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