Not exact matches
Regardless of the actual
voting patterns in this case, any
voting system in which individual members are all elected from a single geographical region, as is
used in the Australian House of Representatives can easily have the party with most seats (and perhaps an overall majority / plurality) not be the party which received most
votes.
Nevertheless, I'm not certain that Campbell's
use of community service as a measure of civic participation is a good predictor for
voting patterns and other forms of adult civic engagement.
It literally explains and provide information on how to
use 100's of chart
patterns to enable you to make the right decisions («
votes»).
Part IV
uses this framework to assess the different
patterns of
voting on the Canadian and US Supreme Courts and discusses the important normative tradeoff between deliberation («positive» cooperation) and logrolling («negative» cooperation).
CA then
used it to predict
voting patterns for the 2016 US presidential election, and target voters with highly specific advertising.