1st Edition

Small State Referendums Lessons from New Zealand

By Caroline Morris Copyright 2025
    106 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book explores the unusual and unique experience of direct democracy in the small state of New Zealand, where referendums have been a persistent feature of the political landscape for over a century. Referendums have been the site of renewed interest from scholars, seeking to respond to what they term the ‘democratic deficit’ in otherwise stable and functional Western democracies.  They have also been at the heart of many divisive and important political and social moments in recent history, from the UK’s Brexit referendum in 2016 to the disputed legitimacy of the 2022 referendums in Russian-occupied Ukraine. This book fills an important gap in the literature through an extended study of the law and practice of referendums in the small Commonwealth state of New Zealand.  It also expands the field of small state democracy studies by applying the insights of this field to the direct democracy experience of a small state.  With the inclusion of comprehensive tables of referendums and legislative materials, this book will be of interest to scholars of direct democracy and small states, politicians, legislators and policy makers and all those with a desire to do democracy better.

    Preface;  Table of Legislation;  1. Introducing referendums and the small state;  2. The New Zealand experience of the referendum;  3. Referendums in context;  4. Conclusion;  Appendix I: Nationwide (Non-Licensing) Referendums 1949-2023;  Appendix II: Alcohol Licensing Referendums 1894-1987, Local Restoration Polls 1996-1999;  Appendix III: Citizen Initiated Referenda Act Referendums 1993-2023;  Appendix IV: New Zealand legislative materials pertaining to referendums

    Biography

    Caroline Morris is Reader in Public Law at Queen Mary University of London, UK