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The electoral boundaries under the Fifth Republic - between partisan logics and parliamentary interests

Doctor :Thomas EHRHARD
Thesis date :27 November 2014
Hours :09h
Discipline :Law
Add to calendar 11/27/2014 09:00 11/27/2014 12:00 Europe/Paris The electoral boundaries under the Fifth Republic - between partisan logics and parliamentary interests The myth of the gerrymandering overshadows the redistricting. Governments allegedly use it to draw a favorable electoral map aiming electoral profits. Thus, it is supposed to be an electioneering mechanism used for partisan motives. In France, few studies have been devoted to redistricting which is... false MM/DD/YYYY
Jury :

Hugues PORTELLI - Professor (université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas)

Xavier CRETTIEZ - Professor (université Saint Quentin en Yvelines)

Michel HASTINGS - Professor (IEP - Lille)

Jean-Michel DE WAELE - Professor (université libre de Bruxelles)

Ilvo DIAMANTI - Professor (université d'Urbino)

Sylvie STRUDEL - Professor (université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas)

The myth of the gerrymandering overshadows the redistricting. Governments allegedly use it to draw a favorable electoral map aiming electoral profits. Thus, it is supposed to be an electioneering mechanism used for partisan motives. In France, few studies have been devoted to redistricting which is also an important object within the international political scientist literature. The thesis puts forward a study of the legislative redistricting under the Fifth Republic following two axes. The first one, the analysis of the policy process, questions the role and the actions of the government. Through a multidisciplinary analysis, it appears that the government is strongly constrained and that MPs have a main function. The second one relates to the consequences of redistricting. After developing a method to understand the politics of limits, the empirical study - statistical and cartographic - shows that districts are made according to deputies - incumbents -, before favoring political parties, or the majority making the redistricting. It also appears that if the constituency boundaries are not decisive, they still have structural consequences on the electoral competition. Under the Fifth Republic, redistricting can be described as interparliamentary and intrapartisan. To sum up, neither the redistricting process nor its electoral consequences match the "classic" cognitive representation of the redistricting.