The partisan impacts of non-partisan redistricting: Northern Ireland 1993-95

Citation
Dj. Rossiter et al., The partisan impacts of non-partisan redistricting: Northern Ireland 1993-95, T I BR GEOG, 23(4), 1998, pp. 455-480
Citations number
47
Categorie Soggetti
EnvirnmentalStudies Geografy & Development
Journal title
TRANSACTIONS OF THE INSTITUTE OF BRITISH GEOGRAPHERS
ISSN journal
00202754 → ACNP
Volume
23
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
455 - 480
Database
ISI
SICI code
0020-2754(1998)23:4<455:TPIONR>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
Space is manipulated for political purposes in a great variety of ways, and its restructuring is frequently a focus of conflict. The nature of such co nflict is explored here.(1) Legislation requires that all parliamentary con stituencies in the United Kingdom are periodically reviewed by independent Boundary Commissions. The Fourth Periodic Review in Northern Ireland began in 1993 and coincided with a period of intense political activity, associat ed with what was commonly termed 'the peace process'. Political parties, an xious to ensure that the resulting boundaries favoured their partisan inter ests (and, in the case of Sinn Fein, keen to establish their democratic bon a fides), invested considerable effort in their attempts to influence the o utcome. The Commissions' recommendations became the subject of claim and co unter-claim regarding bias towards one or other of the province's two main communities - Nationalist and Unionist - and as a result of that conflict, they were revised with priority given to a different criterion. This paper evaluates those claims with a close inspection of the redistricting process , illustrating how an ostensibly non-partisan process is partisan in both i ts conduct and its outcome.