Riambau Armet, Guillem2021-03-2220200032-3187https://hdl.handle.net/2445/175565Māori in New Zealand have the right to choose which electorate to vote in: they can choose to vote in a 'General district' (with other Māori and all non- Māori), or to vote in a 'Māori district', where only Māori are allowed to register. Every five years there is a period known as Māori Electoral Option, during which Māori are given the option to either stay in their current district or switch. This offers an ideal setting to analyse whether Māori voters strategically choose to register where they expect the race to be closer. To that avail, I use data from two Māori Electoral Options, two general elections, and two censuses. Results suggest that only a very small fraction of Māori (less than 2%) seem to respond to the strategic incentives described. Two forces seem to play a much larger role in enrolment choices: cultural allegiances and socioeconomic status. Māori with a stronger sense of Māori identity and Māori living in socially disadvantaged areas tend to overwhelmingly enrol in the Māori districts. The implications of these results are discussed.25 p.application/pdfeng(c) The Research Trust of Victoria, 2020MaorisEleccionsSociologia electoralNova ZelandaMaori (New Zealand people)ElectionsVoting researchNew ZealandMāori in New Zealand: voting with their feet?info:eu-repo/semantics/article7091282021-03-22info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess