[Home]University constitutencies

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In the past in the United Kingdom there were university constitutencies were a university would elect members of Parliament. This meant in effect that graduates of certain universities were entitled to two votes, one for the electorate in which they lived and another for the university from which they graduated.

University consituencies, for Oxford and Cambridge, for the House of Commons were abolished in 1948.

In Northern Ireland, the [Queens University of Belfast]? was a constituency until the entry into force of the Electoral Law Act (Northern Ireland) 1968 (1968 c. 20, act of the [Stormont Parliament]?).

In the Republic of Ireland, university constitutencies were abolished by the ELECTORAL (UNIVERSITY CONSTITUENCIES) ACT, 1936 of the 29th June, 1936.

Some other former countries of the British Empire, such as India, had university constituencies. (Do they still?).


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Last edited October 23, 2001 12:16 pm by 137.111.13.xxx (diff)
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