Academic literature on the topic 'New Zealand elections'

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Journal articles on the topic "New Zealand elections"

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Gauld, Robin. "Democratising health care governance? New Zealand's inaugural district health board elections, 2001." Australian Health Review 25, no. 4 (2002): 142. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ah020142.

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New Zealand's 'district health board' (DHB) system has been under implementation since the 1999 general election. A key factor motivating the change to DHBs is the democratisation of health care governance. A majority of the new DHB members are popularly elected. Previously, hospital board members were government appointees. Inaugural DHB elections were held in October 2001. This article reports on the election results and the wider operating context for DHBs. It notes organisational issues to be considered for the next DHB elections in 2004, and questions the extent to which the elections and DHB governance structure will enhance health care democratisation in New Zealand.
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CONEY, S. "Health and New Zealand elections." Lancet 342, no. 8879 (October 1993): 1103–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0140-6736(93)92073-3.

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Bullock, David. "Electoral Expression With Institutional Bounds: Framing Judicial Treatment of Elections in New Zealand." Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 42, no. 3 (October 3, 2011): 459. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v42i3.5122.

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This article explores the way in which the courts have treated cases involving electoral broadcasting in New Zealand. Cases involving electoral broadcasting have been decided on a range of approaches. This article uses an "institutional" conception of elections to determine whether certain bounds can be drawn to define a category of election expression, comprising certain rules and norms, which the courts can use when dealing with expression around elections. New Zealand's case law to date is broadly consistent with an institutional model of electoral expression within which a higher level of judicial scrutiny of broadcasters is exhibited. This paper proposes that an express recognition of this institutional conception would provide some clarity and unity to decisions involving the sensitive issue of electoral broadcasting.
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Tan, Alexander C., Dawn Miller-McTaggart, and Stephanie Borthwick. "New Zealand parliamentary elections of 2011." Electoral Studies 34 (June 2014): 291–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.electstud.2013.08.009.

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Gauld, Robin. "Delivering democracy? An analysis of New Zealand's District Health Board elections, 2001 and 2004." Australian Health Review 29, no. 3 (2005): 345. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ah050345.

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The district health board (DHB) system is New Zealand?s present structure for the governance and delivery of publicly-funded health care. An aim of the DHB system is to democratise health care governance, and a key element of DHBs is elected membership of their governing boards. This article focuses on the electoral component of DHBs. It reports on the first DHB elections of 2001 and recent 2004 elections. The article presents and discusses data regarding candidates, the electoral process, voter behaviour and election results. It suggests that the extent to which the DHB elections are contributing to aims of democratisation is questionable.
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Paull, John. "Pandemic Elections and the Covid-Safe Effect: Incumbents Re-elected in Six Covid-19 Safe Havens." Journal of Social and Development Sciences 12, no. 1(S) (June 22, 2021): 17–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.22610/jsds.v12i1(s).3159.

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The Antipodes have been amongst the safest places on the planet during the Covid-19 pandemic. The governments of Australia and New Zealand (national, state, and territory governments) have acted promptly, decisively, and cohesively in closing borders, quarantining incoming returnees, instigating rigorous contact tracing and extensive testing, social distancing, hand washing, masks, and occasional lockdowns. Antipodean governments and populations have long experience of awareness and compliance with biosecurity issues. Isolation and distance have long served to keep Australia and New Zealand free of many pests and diseases. Each Antipodean election held during the Covid-19 pandemic has returned the incumbent. During the first 14 months of the pandemic, six out of six incumbent governments facing elections during the Covid pandemic have been returned. Five returned incumbents were center-left while the sixth was center-right. Four of the elections have rewarded the incumbent government with an increased majority, the Northern Territory election returned a reduced majority, and the Tasmanian election returned the status quo with the narrowest of majorities maintained. The New Zealand election returned the Labor government to power in their own right and released them from the coalition. The Western Australian election saw Labor returned with a landslide result with an unprecedented, win of 53 out of 59 seats (90% of seats). The object of the present paper is to report the outcomes of the six antipodean elections conducted during the Covid-19 pandemic (to date) and to reflect on the Covid-safe effect on them if any.
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Zvulun, Jacky Yaakov. "The New Zealand Print Media and the 2004-2007 Local Elections: A Case Study." Lex localis - Journal of Local Self-Government 13, no. 4 (October 2, 2015): 897–914. http://dx.doi.org/10.4335/13.3.897-914(2015).

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Voters gain their information from news media, and in particular from print media, about politicians. More importantly, voters develop their understanding of political processes based on what they read. In this paper, I examine the print media coverage of the campaign introducing new electoral system Single Transferable Vote (STV) in the New Zealand Local Body Elections 2004 and 2007 compared with the campaign introducing Mixed Member Proportional (MMP) electoral system in the 1996 national election. I focus particularly on the coverage of the alternative electoral system, STV, by two newspapers – the Dominion Post and the Otago Daily Times from the perspective of type, nature, and number of the articles published and the attitudes toward encouraging participation and introducing new electoral system [STV]. The study shows that both newspapers offered a significantly poorer coverage of the 2004 and 2007 local elections compared to the campaign in 1996 national election. This also might lead to the prediction of one of the reason decreasing or increasing voter turnout.
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Zvulun, Jacky Yaakov. "Postal Voting and Voter Turnout in Local Elections: Lessons from New Zealand and Australia." Lex localis - Journal of Local Self-Government 8, no. 2 (April 26, 2010): 115–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.4335/8.2.115-131(2010).

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The relationship between postal voting and voter turnout in local elections needs to be investigated in the context of whether postal voting helps increase voter turnout in twenty-first century local elections. This assists to uplift the discourse about New Zealand and Australia local elections and its voter turnout. This article explores the method of postal voting history by looking at these two countries and analysing the method of political participation at the local level. It argues that postal voting no longer increases or decreases voter turnout in these countries. KEYWORDS: • postal voting • voter turnout • local elections • participation • New Zealand
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Zvulun, Jacky Yaakov. "Electoral System Changes and Voter Turnout: Reflections on New Zealand Local Elections." Lex localis - Journal of Local Self-Government 12, no. 1 (October 2, 2013): 145–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.4335/12.1.145-162(2014).

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Voter turnout in local and general elections is a key element in measuring citizen participation. From 2004, New Zealand local elections were unique in that local councils had the choice of two different electoral systems: plurality majority and proportional representation. We have here the opportunity to study more about New Zealand local elections and changes in electoral systems. This article analyses the impact of the "Single Transferable Vote” electoral system in those councils that adopted it, comparing it to those councils which used "First Past the Post". This article explains how the STV electoral system has not increased voter turnout and was not the cause of low voter turnout in the 2004-2007 local elections. It might, however, offer voters a better way to choose their preferences.
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Nagel, Jack H. "Voter Turnout in New Zealand General Elections, 1928-1988." Political Science 40, no. 2 (December 1988): 16–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003231878804000202.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "New Zealand elections"

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Chambers, Kirsten Elizabeth. "Political Communication in a Multicultural New Zealand: Ethnic Minority Media and the 2008 Election." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Social and Political Sciences, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/3777.

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New Zealand’s 2008 general election, with its unprecedented focus on the “ethnic vote” and ethnic minority candidates with highest-ever party list rankings, proved compelling from a migrant engagement perspective. How do migrant communities achieve voice in their adopted country? And how does a now unmistakably multicultural nation address the political communication needs of an increasingly vocal, pro-active, and politically involved migrant population? This thesis examines the role of ethnic minority media in engaging migrant communities in the democratic process. In particular, it examines South Asian media in New Zealand and the extent to which they represented a vital public sphere for informing and engaging their wider migrant communities in public political debate during the 2008 election campaign. Applying qualitative and quantitative research approaches, this thesis elicits and analyses diverse perspectives of the extent to which local South Asian newspapers and radio current affairs programming represented an important complementary public sphere for informing and engaging migrant voters during the campaign. Ultimately, this study provides an alternative perspective on media coverage of the 2008 New Zealand general election, and insight into the role and influence of ethnic minority media within democratic discourse. As a contribution to the body of academic literature examining the media and minority political engagement, it is intended to provoke critical consideration of the communications needs facing new migrants in an increasingly multicultural New Zealand.
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Marett, Alexandra. "Participating Online: The Internet and its Role in Political Participatory Behaviour in the Context of the New Zealand General Election 2008." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Social and Political Science, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/4962.

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Recent developments in Internet technology have opened up new doors for political campaigning and related news information with video and social networking applications. These have created new spaces that the voting public can politically participate in. This study explores the extent to which such participation takes place, in order to contribute to the wider question of whether changes in the media can rejuvenate a growing apathetic electorate that has become increasingly isolated from the more traditional methods of political participation (Putnam 2000). There are now many unanswered questions regarding how this new technology will play a role in influencing voter preferences and behaviour compared to other forms of traditional mass media. The exponential growth of Internet technology and its use means that the majority of literature written on the subject becomes time-bound leaving large gaps of research and analysis that needs to be done. This thesis examined the opportunities made available for political campaigning by the Internet and how widening political knowledge can ultimately influence Internet consumers at the voting booth. The research undertaken was a combination of quantitative and qualitative analysis using participatory groups in a controlled environment. Participants consumed different forms of mass media and any significant changes in preferences and behaviour was noted. The overall hypothesis of this thesis is that the Internet does have an effect on potential voters by providing a wider and more in-depth look at politics that broadens political knowledge, leading to greater political participation.
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Robinson, Claire Elizabeth. "Advertising and the market orientation of political parties contesting the 1999 and 2002 New Zealand general election campaigns : a thesis presented in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Politics at Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand." Massey University. School of History, Philosophy and Politics, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10179/243.

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This thesis proposes an alternative way of establishing a link between market orientation and electoral success, by focusing on market orientation as a message instead of as a management function. Using interpretive textual analysis the thesis examines the advertising messages of the highest polling political parties for evidence of voter orientation and competitor orientation in the 1999 and 2002 New Zealand general election campaigns. Relating manifest market orientation to a number of statistical indicators of electoral success the thesis looks for plausible associations between the visual manifestation of market orientation in political advertisements and parties' achievement of their party vote goals in the 1999 and 2002 elections. It offers party-focused explanations for electoral outcomes to complement existing voter-centric explanations, and adds another level of scholarly understanding of recent electoral outcomes in New Zealand.While the thesis finds little association between demonstration of competitor orientation in political advertisements and electoral success, it finds a plausible relationship between parties that demonstrated a voter orientation in their political advertisements and goal achievement. The parties that achieved their party vote goals in 1999 and 2002 tended to demonstrate an affinity for their target voter groups by showing images of voters and their environments and images of party leaders interacting with voters. They demonstrated concern for the satisfaction of the needs of existing voters by using words of togetherness and proving they had met their previous promises. They did not change their policy or leadership messages dramatically between campaigns. There was a visual consistency to their television, print and billboard advertising messages which rendered the messages easy to recognise and remember. They were clear about what they were offering in exchange for the party vote and recognised the need to offer something in addition to previous offerings in order to attract new voters.
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McCluskey, Nathan. "A Policy of Honesty: Election Manifesto Pledge Fulfilment in New Zealand 1972-2005." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Social and Political Sciences, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/2648.

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The 1980s and 1990s was a period in which dramatic changes occurred in New Zealand’s political landscape. These changes affected many aspects of the way democracy in New Zealand was understood and operated. In the 10 years from 1984- 1994, New Zealand moved from being a highly protected reasonably insular mixed economy with significant levels of state intervention in most areas of the socioeconomic framework to one with permeable borders that was quickly globalising based on a market-model for both domestic and international business functions. This was accompanied by a change in the electoral system from a simple majoritarian plurality first-past-the-post system to a mixed member proportional representation system that led to the breakdown of single-party government as it gave way to coalition politics. The causes of this latter shift related to a feeling that the previous system was both unfair and gave too much power to a few individuals in one party who seemed to have limited accountability. It was the belief of a substantial portion of the electorate that successive governments had breached the people’s trust by ignoring unwritten conventions around implementing an electoral mandate based on campaign manifesto promises. This thesis seeks for the first time to answer how real these perceptions were by assessing pledge fulfilment before 1984, during the 1984 to 1996 period, and after the advent of MMP, in order to reveal any changes that have occurred across this critical period in New Zealand’s political history in relation to the application of the mandate theory of democratic government. It will also provide insight for the first time into the impact changing an electoral system has on election policy implementation for major parties and raises important questions about popular ideas of democracy, electoral support for election promise-keeping and methods of accountability as traditional notions of democracy are challenged by the revealed reality of both government action and voter reaction.
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Whitcher, Gary Frederick. "'More than America': some New Zealand responses to American culture in the mid-twentieth century." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Humanities, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6304.

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This thesis focuses on a transformational but disregarded period in New Zealand’s twentieth century history, the era from the arrival of the Marines in 1942 to the arrival of Rock Around the Clock in 1956. It examines one of the chief agents in this metamorphosis: the impact of American culture. During this era the crucial conduits of that culture were movies, music and comics. The aims of my thesis are threefold: to explore how New Zealanders responded to this cultural trinity, determine the key features of their reactions and assess their significance. The perceived modernity and alterity of Hollywood movies, musical genres such as swing, and the content and presentation of American comics and ‘pulps’, became the sources of heated debate during the midcentury. Many New Zealanders admired what they perceived as the exuberance, variety and style of such American media. They also applauded the willingness of the cultural triptych to appropriate visual, textual and musical forms and styles without respect for the traditional classifications of cultural merit. Such perceived standards were based on the privileged judgements of cultural arbiters drawn from members of New Zealand’s educational and civic elites. Key figures within these elites insisted that American culture was ‘low’, inferior and commodified, threatening the dominance of a sacrosanct, traditional ‘high’culture. Many of them also maintained that these American cultural imports endangered both the traditionally British nature of our cultural heritage, and New Zealand’s distinctively ‘British’ identity. Many of these complaints enfolded deeper objections to American movies, music and literary forms exemplified by comics and pulps. Significant intellectual and civic figures portrayed these cultural modes as pernicious and malignant, because they were allegedly the product of malignant African-American, Jewish and capitalist sources, which threatened to poison the cultural and social values of New Zealanders, especially the young. In order to justify such attitudes, these influential cultural guardians portrayed the general public as an essentially immature, susceptible, unthinking and puritanical mass. Accordingly, this public, supposedly ignorant of the dangers posed by American culture, required the intervention and protection of members of this elite. Responses to these potent expressions of American culture provide focal points which both illuminate and reflect wider social, political and ideological controversies within midcentury New Zealand. Not only were these reactions part of a process of comprehension and negotiation of new aesthetic styles and media modes. They also represent an arena of public and intellectual contention whose significance has been neglected or under-valued. New Zealanders’ attitudes towards the new cinematic, literary and musical elements of American culture occurred within a rich and revealing socio-political and ideological context. When we comment on that culture we reveal significant features of our own national and cultural selves.
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McCluskey, Nathan P. "A policy of honesty : election manifesto pledge fulfilment in New Zealand 1972-2005 : a thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science in the University of Canterbury /." 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/2648.

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Venables, David. "Making politics go well down under : public journalism in New Zealand daily newspapers : a thesis presented in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Management in Communication Management at Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand." 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10179/838.

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The literature on the use of public journalism suggests that it can lead to different news coverage than is traditionally provided by the news media. Specifically, these differences have been identified in story content, use of different sources and use of mobilising information. This thesis asks whether such differences can be identified in newspapers’ coverage of the 2001 Local Body Elections in New Zealand. The research involved content analysis of New Zealand’s six largest daily newspapers, three of them with experience of using public journalism and three with no such experience. Interviews were also conducted with two or three senior journalists involved in organising each paper’s election campaign in order to explore their goals for the election coverage and evaluation of it. The results mirror those of previous research by showing significant differences in the coverage of the newspapers with public journalism experience in relation to some factors, but not others. The papers with a public journalism background consistently used more non-elite sources than the traditional papers, but did not consistently use more female sources. They also included mobilising information in stories more frequently and made greater use of story features, or “elements”, associated with public journalism. However, one of the papers with no experience of public journalism also ranked highly in relation to these two factors. The interviews revealed some differences in goals among the journalists, but this was not a simple split between the journalists on papers with public journalism experience and the other journalists. For example, not all interviewees working for the papers experienced in using public journalism agreed that their goal should be to boost voter turnout. Nor was an overt commitment to supporting the democratic process expressed only by staff on the papers with public journalism experience. The interviews did, however, identify that only the three newspapers with a public journalism background used polling to identify the issues that were important to the public and proceeded to cover these issues during their election campaign
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Hopkins, Kane. "Blogs, political discussion and the 2005 New Zealand general election : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of PhD in Communication at Massey University." 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10179/1448.

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Communication technologies have altered the way people engage in political discourse. In recent years the internet has played a significant role in changing the way people receive political information, news and opinion. Perhaps the most significant difference as a result of advancements in communication and internet technology is how people participate in discussions and deliberate issues that are important to them. The 2005 New Zealand General Election fell at a time when functionality and access to fast and affordable internet allowed people to develop their own information channels and also determine how, where and to what level they participated in debate and commentary on election issues. The aim of this thesis is to examine how blogs were used to discuss political issues during the 2005 New Zealand General Election campaign period through the use of three inter-related methodologies. The methodologies used in the research are content analysis, interviews and a case study. Four blogs and the comments sections are analysed by way of content analysis for adherence to the rules of communicative interaction within the public sphere. Interviews were conducted with a number of people who blogged during the 2005 election campaign, to develop an understanding of their experiences and perceptions of the role blogging played in the election. A case study of politician and blogger Rodney Hide examines the role blogs play as a communication tool for politicians and the how they change the relationship between politician and voter. An explosion of academic literature in recent years has looked at the participative and deliberative nature of the internet and blogs as having opened new spaces and what implications that may have for democracy. Jurgen Habermas' seminal book, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere, provides the theoretical basis for this thesis and the foundation for academic writing in this area. Habermas developed the normative notion of the public sphere as a part of social life where citizens exchanged views and opinions on matters of importance to the common good, so that wider public opinion can be formed.
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Books on the topic "New Zealand elections"

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McRobie, Alan. New Zealand's 2002 electoral redistribution. Rangiora, N.Z: MC Enterprises, 2002.

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Norton, Clifford. New Zealand parliamentary election results, 1946-1987. [Wellington]: Department of Political Science, Victoria University of Wellington, 1988.

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Roper, Juliet. The 1996 New Zealand First campaign. Hamilton, N.Z: Dept. of Management Communication, University of Waikato, 2000.

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Catt, Helena. Voter's choice: Electoral change in New Zealand? Palmerston North, N.Z: Dunmore Press, 1992.

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Roper, Juliet. The 1996 New Zealand Labour Party campaign. Hamilton, N.Z: Dept. of Management Communication, University of Waikato, 2000.

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Roper, Juliet. The 1996 New Zealand National Party campaign. Hamilton, N.Z: Dept. of Management Communication, University of Waikato, 2000.

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Levine, Stephen I. From Muldoon to Lange: New Zealand elections in the 1980s. Rangiora, N.Z: MC Enterprises, 2002.

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Commission, New Zealand Electoral. Everything you need to know about voting under MMP: New Zealand's electoral system. Wellington: GP Publications, 1996.

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New Zealand. Parliament. Justice and Electoral Committee. Inquiry into the 2002 general election: Report of the Justice and Electoral Committee. [Wellington]: New Zealand House of Representatives, 2004.

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Peter, Aimer, ed. Voters' vengeance: The 1990 election in New Zealand and the fate of the fourth Labour government. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "New Zealand elections"

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Arseneau, Thérèse. "Electing Representative Legislatures: Lessons from New Zealand." In Making Every Vote Count, edited by Henry Milner, 133–44. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442602717-015.

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Lees-Marshment, Jennifer. "Introduction: Political Marketing and Management in New Zealand." In Political Marketing and Management in the 2017 New Zealand Election, 1–5. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-94298-8_1.

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Barrett, James. "Candidate Brand Personality and the 2017 New Zealand General Election." In Political Marketing and Management in the 2017 New Zealand Election, 67–84. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-94298-8_5.

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Clark, Helen. "The Worm that Turned: New Zealand’s 1996 General Election and the Televised ‘Worm’ Debates." In Televised Election Debates, 122–29. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230379602_7.

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Lees-Marshment, Jennifer, Edward Elder, Lisa Chant, Danny Osborne, Justin Savoie, and Clifton van der Linden. "Vote Compass NZ 2017: Marketing Insights into Public Views on Policy and Leaders." In Political Marketing and Management in the 2017 New Zealand Election, 7–22. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-94298-8_2.

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Lees-Marshment, Jennifer, Edward Elder, Lisa Chant, Danny Osborne, Justin Savoie, and Clifton van der Linden. "Political Parties and Their Customers: The Alignment of Party Policies with Supporter, Target and Undecided Market Preferences." In Political Marketing and Management in the 2017 New Zealand Election, 23–41. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-94298-8_3.

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Lees-Marshment, Jennifer. "Messy Marketing in the 2017 New Zealand Election: The Incomplete Market Orientation of the Labour and National Parties." In Political Marketing and Management in the 2017 New Zealand Election, 43–65. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-94298-8_4.

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Robinson, Claire. "Minor Party Campaign Advertising: A Market-Oriented Assessment." In Political Marketing and Management in the 2017 New Zealand Election, 85–98. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-94298-8_6.

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Elder, Edward. "Communicating Market-Oriented Leadership in Power and Opposition." In Political Marketing and Management in the 2017 New Zealand Election, 99–115. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-94298-8_7.

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Lees-Marshment, Jennifer. "Conclusion: Political Marketing and Management Lessons for Research and Practice." In Political Marketing and Management in the 2017 New Zealand Election, 117–37. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-94298-8_8.

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Conference papers on the topic "New Zealand elections"

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Gong, Hugo, A. Miriam B. Lips, and Mary Tate. "Understanding and Comparing E-Campaigning Utilisation in the 2008 New Zealand General Election." In 2012 45th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/hicss.2012.610.

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