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A Citizen's Duty
Voter inequality and the case for compulsory turnout
ISBN:
Author: Emily Keaney and Ben Rogers
Contributors:
Price: Free
Publication Date: 01 May 2006
This report focuses on a very significant but relatively neglected challenge to our democracy: inequality in voter turnout.
Many people are aware that voting turnout has declined dramatically in recent elections – indeed turnout in the last two elections was lower than in any peace time elections in modern times. And this of course has provoked a great deal of public debate and some soul searching among the political class.
Yet much of the discussion assumes that what we have witnessed is an overall decline in turnout across social groups. Politicians, commentators and policymakers, outside the small world of electoral specialists, have yet to appreciate the really significant aspect of this development: that while voting has held up relatively well across some (mainly better off) groups, it has fallen steeply among other (largely worse off or more vulnerable) groups.
In other words, we have seen not just a fall in voter turnout, but a rise in turnout inequality.

Capable Communities
Public Service Reform: The next chapter
In this paper we turn our attention to the role citizens and communities can play in directly producing services, setting out the challenges that lie ahead, and identifying the questions our research will seek to answer over the coming months.
The English Question
ippr surveys MPs

ippr has conducted a survey of MPs to find out if they think that England is losing out as a result of these changes, as many people have claimed.
You Can’t Put Me In A Box
Super-diversity and the end of identity politics in Britain

This paper attempts to map out just how diverse Britain is, both in terms of who lives in Britain and how they identify themselves.