Election Reform Newsletter, Issue #51
Election Reform Newsletter
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AEI-Brookings Election Reform Project
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Harry Hochheiser, et. al., Committee on a Framework for Understanding Electronic Voting, National Research Council of the National Academies
Part of a broder initiative of the National Academies, this paper reviews issues pertinent to the development of new electronic voting systems and defines criteria for evaluating system designs.
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David C. Kimball (University of Missouri-St. Louis) and Martha Kropf (University of Missouri-Kansas City), Public Opinion Quarterly
Kimball and Kropf find that features of ballot design are associated with over- and undervotes and exacerbate the racial disparity with which they are cast.
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Daniel Tokaji, Election Law @ Moritz
This essay provides a wide-angle view of the ongoing controversy related to voter fraud allegations and the Department of Justice, with suggestions on where the debate may go from here.
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R. Michael Alvarez (Caltech) and Jonathan Nagler (New York University) , Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review
The authors examine the effects of past reforms such as vote by mail and election-day registration as well as the results of the year 2000 primary election in Arizona and determine that the implementation of Internet voting would likely be detrimental to minority representation.
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Election Law @ Moritz, run through Moritz College of Law at the Ohio State University, contains both explanation and commentary on a wealth of election reform issues from a legal perspective.
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Electionline.org provides daily news updates on election reform issues, as well as deeper analysis of selected topics, including recent reports on voter registration, recount procedures, and the progress in implementing the Help America Vote Act since 2002.
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Election
Reform Newsletter
Stay up to date with the latest developments in Election Reform with analysis,
reports, legislation and more.
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