Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blackballing> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 26 of
26
with 100 items per page.
- Blackballing abstract "Blackballing is a rejection in a traditional form of secret ballot, where a white ball or ballot constitutes a vote in support and a black ball signifies opposition. This system is typically used where a club's rules provide that, rather than a majority of the votes, one or two objections are sufficient to defeat a proposition. Since the seventeenth century, these rules have commonly applied to elections to membership of many gentlemen's clubs and similar institutions such as Freemasonry and fraternities.A large supply of black and white balls is provided for voters. Each voter audibly casts a single ball into the ballot box under cover of the box, or of a combination of a cloth and the box itself, so that observers can see who votes but not how they are voting. When all voting is complete, the box is opened and the balls displayed: all present can immediately see the result, without any means of knowing which members are objecting.".
- Blackballing thumbnail Ballotboxballs.jpg?width=300.
- Blackballing wikiPageID "588158".
- Blackballing wikiPageRevisionID "590640240".
- Blackballing hasPhotoCollection Blackballing.
- Blackballing subject Category:Clubs_and_societies.
- Blackballing subject Category:Voting_systems.
- Blackballing type Abstraction100002137.
- Blackballing type Association108049401.
- Blackballing type Club108227214.
- Blackballing type ClubsAndSocieties.
- Blackballing type Group100031264.
- Blackballing type Organization108008335.
- Blackballing type SocialGroup107950920.
- Blackballing type YagoLegalActor.
- Blackballing type YagoLegalActorGeo.
- Blackballing type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Blackballing comment "Blackballing is a rejection in a traditional form of secret ballot, where a white ball or ballot constitutes a vote in support and a black ball signifies opposition. This system is typically used where a club's rules provide that, rather than a majority of the votes, one or two objections are sufficient to defeat a proposition.".
- Blackballing label "Blackballing".
- Blackballing sameAs m.02svxj.
- Blackballing sameAs Q4922543.
- Blackballing sameAs Q4922543.
- Blackballing sameAs Blackballing.
- Blackballing wasDerivedFrom Blackballing?oldid=590640240.
- Blackballing depiction Ballotboxballs.jpg.
- Blackballing isPrimaryTopicOf Blackballing.