Trust and electoral technologies throughout the election cycle: Comparing the USA, Netherlands, Poland, and Kenya

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29379/jedem.v16i3.922

Keywords:

trust, distrust, election technologies

Abstract

Technology and election organization are increasingly intertwined, encompassing voting systems and supporting infrastructure. This interaction puts at the spotlight aspects related to trust and public confidence, fuelled by threat actors from actors aiming to disrupt electoral integrity using publicized attacks and disinformation campaigns against the use of such technologies. In the literature, there is still a lack of a cohesive, coordinated methodology for this issue that starts with a needs-based approach. This paper analyses the relationship between trust and technology implementation across the electoral cycle by presenting a set of selected case studies presenting diverse levels of democratic development and types of election management bodies. While examining how trust- and distrust-related factors influence implementation, this paper supports experts aiming to approach aspects related to the current erosion of trust in democracy and technology's impact.

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Published

02.10.2024

How to Cite

Duenas-Cid, D. ., Loeber, L., Martin-Rozumiłowicz, B., & Macias, R. (2024). Trust and electoral technologies throughout the election cycle: Comparing the USA, Netherlands, Poland, and Kenya . JeDEM - EJournal of EDemocracy and Open Government, 16(3). https://doi.org/10.29379/jedem.v16i3.922

Issue

Section

Special Issue: e-Vote Conference

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