This article just came across Slashdot. I haven't read the whole thing
yet since I haven't been to the university today but the abstract looks
interesting. FYI.

The original post from SlashDot
http://politics.slashdot.org/politics/05/05/14/1720242.shtml

Kelvin Wong
Department of Computer Science
University of Victoria
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

---

Does Voting Technology Affect Election Outcomes? 
Touch-screen Voting and the 2004 Presidential Election
http://www.nber.org/papers/w11309

ABSTRACT
"Supporters of touch-screen voting claim it is a highly reliable voting
technology, while a growing number of critics argue that paperless
electronic voting systems are vulnerable to fraud. In this paper we use
county-level data on voting technologies in the 2000 and 2004
presidential elections to test whether voting technology affects
electoral outcomes. We first show that there is a positive correlation
between use of touch-screen voting and the level of electoral support
for George Bush. This is true in models that compare the 2000-2004
changes in vote shares between adopting and non-adopting counties within
a state, after controlling for income, demographic composition, and
other factors. Although small, the effect could have been large enough
to influence the final results in some closely contested states. While
on the surface this pattern would appear to be consistent with
allegations of voting irregularities, a closer examination suggests this
interpretation is incorrect. If irregularities did take place, they
would be most likely in counties that could potentially affect statewide
election totals, or in counties where election officials had incentives
to affect the results. Contrary to this prediction, we find no evidence
that touch-screen voting had a larger effect in swing states, or in
states with a Republican Secretary of State. Touch-screen voting could
also indirectly affect vote shares by influencing the relative turnout
of different groups. We find that the adoption of touch-screen voting
has a negative effect on estimated turnout rates, controlling for state
effects and a variety of county-level controls. This effect is larger in
counties with a higher fraction of Hispanic residents (who tend to favor
Democrats) but not in counties with more African Americans (who are
overwhelmingly Democrat voters). Models for the adoption of touch-screen
voting suggest it was more likely to be used in counties with a higher
fraction of Hispanic and Black residents, especially in swing states.
Nevertheless, the impact of non-random adoption patterns on vote shares
is small."


_______________________________________________
DIGITALDIVIDE mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.edc.org/mailman/listinfo/digitaldivide
To unsubscribe, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word UNSUBSCRIBE 
in the body of the message.

Reply via email to