Foundation Briefs Advanced Level Sept/Oct 2013 Brief


the differences between the parties



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the differences between the parties.


Sept/Oct 2013

Aff: Prevents Free-Riding

foundationbriefs.com

Page 42 of 104
Prevents Free-Riding
Democracy is a Public Good—CV Prevents Freeriding JRM
Lever, Annabelle. 2009. Is Compulsory Voting Justified Public Reason 1 (1): 57-74.
The final, and crucial, step in the case for compulsion is the claim that nonvoters are free-riding on voters. They are, it is claimed, selfishly benefiting from the public good of a democratic electoral system without doing their part to maintain it. This claim can be found in every argument for compulsory voting, although it is rarely spelled out in any detail. The key idea here is that a democratic electoral system is a public good, in that all
citizens get to benefit from it, even if they do nothing to contribute to it. Because it is a public good, it is
possible to free-ride, or to enjoy the benefits of that good, without contributing oneself and, indeed, most

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