Voting Patterns at the 2001 Australia Federal Election
On-line
Bob Stimson, Tung-Kai
Shyy and
Rod McCrea
School of Geography,
Planning and Architecture
University of
Queensland
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The objective of this research is to
develop a prototype Web geographical information system
(GIS) for mapping voting patterns at the 2001 Australia federal election.
Our application, which integrates GIS functionality, client/server
technology and the Internet, can generate useful documents such as maps to examine and present patterns of voting across polling booths with
the capacity to match socioeconomic data from the census to polling booth
catchments. A classification functionality that consists of Equal Interval, Quantile and Location Quotient to generate different choropleth displays has
been added to the Web GIS application for identifying inherent patterns and
level of voter support for a political party received through the primary
votes or two party preferred casts for candidates standing for a party. The
polling booths outcomes which may be expected on the basis of socioeconomic
data for booth catchments are modelled using discriminant analysis, and
these expected outcomes can be visualised using the Web GIS application. A 3
dimensional display of the percentage of primary vote cast for the Coalition
parties and the Labor party is generated and can be accessed on line. We
expect that politicians and political party leaders could utilise the
application and associated maps to facilitate policies that are oriented
towards specific demographic and socio-economic groups or to voters in
particular regions. This Web GIS application is useful
to show the pattern and benchmark of voting outcomes of political parties
such as Coalition, Labor, Democrats, Greens and Pauline Hanson's One Nation.
Click on to start the visual representation of voting
outcomes
from the 2001 federal election.
Your feedback on using this
application would be greatly appreciated.
©
2004
Disclaimer
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