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Political Research Quarterly
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Residential Mobility, Voter Registration, and Electoral Participation in Canada

Craig Leonard Brians

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRVINE

This paper tests two propositions advanced to explain reduced voter turnout among the residentially mobile: (1) when citizens have a personal responsibility to re-register following a move, this poses a participation barrier and reduces turnout; (2) the act of moving severs the social net works that normally provide citizens with the information and support to make political choices, thereby reducing turnout. These alternative expla nations are evaluated using Canadian national election data. The analysis reinforces previous research asserting the importance of registration barri ers in reducing the turnout of those who have recently moved. Addition ally, I find that movers' social ties play an independent role in their turnout, with moving particularly attenuating unmarried citizens' turnout. These findings are extended to suggest that recent U.S. initiatives facilitating voter registration may produce less than previously predicted turnout gains among the mobile.

Political Research Quarterly, Vol. 50, No. 1, 215-227 (1997)
DOI: 10.1177/106591299705000111


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