Should We Increase Young People’s Voting Power?
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/33320Date
2024-03-28Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Angell, KimAbstract
This paper argues that democratic collectives have reason to increase the voting power of
their younger members. It first presents an intuitive case for weighted voting in general,
before drawing support from a prominent principle of democratic inclusion – the all affected principle. On a plausible understanding of that principle, a decision may affect
people to varying degrees, and this variation should be reflected in the strength of their
say. The paper then argues that exposure time to a decision’s effects is typically a good
proxy for tracking such variation, such that collectives have reason to gradually reduce
their members’ voting power as they grow older. This holds, for example, in the ordinary
parliamentary elections in representative democracies. It is then argued that we may build
a similar case for age-weighting on a plausible version of the all-affected principle’s main
rival, the all-subjected principle. The paper ends by addressing various objections. It ar gues that none of them undermine the case for age-weighting, and that some might even
support age-weighting over its non-weighted (‘one person, one vote’) alternative.
Publisher
Springer NatureCitation
Angell. Should We Increase Young People’s Voting Power?. Ethical Theory and Moral Practice. 2024Metadata
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