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Post: Free and Fair Elections in the Internet-Era


A while back I shared my draft article on election standards and the Internet 
commissioned by IFES/USAID.  The final version, with a few updates, is now 
available from:

   http://www.ifes.org/arc-project.html?projectid=electionstandards

What do you think must be done online by democratic actors to hold free and 
fair elections now that we exist in the Internet-era? My take starts below.

Steven Clift
http://dowire.org
http://publicus.net

Here is the introduction and first part of the paper:

Challenging the Norms and Standards of Election Administration:
Election Management Bodies and Use of the Internet

By Steven Clift


I. Introduction

The goal of this paper is to establish new proposals for international 
electoral standards1 for the use of the Internet during election campaigns 
(outside of voting).

Election administrators and governments need to decide how they will use the 
Internet to improve election processes and better inform voters in the near 
term regardless of the complexity and controversy surrounding Internet voting. 
As has been seen in elections around the world, the influence of the Internet 
is growing.

The recommendations2 proposed in this paper attempt to answer the following 
questions:

1. How should the Internet be used to support better election processes and 
informed voting?

2. What content and services must be online to ensure free and fair elections?

The emerging role of the Internet surrounding elections deserves close 
attention. It may be that changes in campaigning and citizen action online, 
rather than e-voting, present the real opportunities for - or challenges to - 
democratic transformation.

Once documented and shared, best practices can bring existing democratic 
freedoms and electoral standards to life where applied. However, while most 
election-related benefits from online activities will be gained through best 
practices, a standards established model for "must-have" and "should-have" 
online elements is proposed. As more citizens come online, electoral management 
bodies (EMBs) will see their online responsibilities increase. Clearly, these 
responsibilities will arrive sooner in "wired" countries with active online 
populations, but they will eventually arrive everywhere. Creating a shared body 
of best practices now can benefit all democracies over time.


II. Two Proposed Internet-Era Electoral Standards

Two key proposals for information-age electoral standards deserve special 
attention and debate. They inform all of the recommendations below:

1. All information produced, compiled, disseminated, or disclosed to hold a 
democratic election as established by national laws and international electoral 
standards must be publicly accessible on the Internet in a standard, 
authoritative format.

2. Voter privacy must be established to cover all voter actions online (seeking 
information about political candidates and issues; communicating with family, 
friends, and members of private associations about elections or governance; and 
voting).

The need for the first standard is intuitive. In order to build trust in the 
electoral process, promote voter participation, encourage informed voting, and 
ensure legal compliance, EMBs must make public all information about election 
standards, laws, regulations, and voter education programs. In addition, 
existing electoral standards require broad and timely access to this 
information. It is almost impossible to conceive of any democratic purpose 
served by keeping such information offline.

The second proposed standard opens an area of great debate. The Internet era 
provides many ways to track individual behavior; however, to ensure continued 
participation in the electoral system, voters must feel they can freely explore 
the raw materials of political thought without fearing public exposure by those 
with state, media, or economic power.


Footnotes:

1 Key documents establishing "electoral standards" include International IDEA�s 
"International Electoral Standards: Guidelines for reviewing the legal 
framework of elections 
(http://www.idea.int/publications/electoral_guidelines.pdf) and the OSCE�s 
"Existing Commitments for Democratic Elections in OSCE Participating States' 
(http://www.osce.org/odihr/?page=publications&div=topics&topic=elections). 
These documents extensively reference the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 
(http://www.unhchr.ch/udhr/index.htm), International Covenant on Civil and 
Political Rights and related treaties (http://www.unhchr.ch/html/intlinst.htm), 
and the Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development 
(http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/wssd/agreements).

2 As intended, the recommendations in this paper are proposed exclusively by 
the author, Steven Clift. This paper contains updates from January 2007.





For the full paper see:

     http://www.ifes.org/arc-project.html?projectid=electionstandards

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