2015
DOI: 10.24297/ijmit.v10i7.593
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E-Voting: Success and Failures. Lesson for Africa

Abstract: This study investigated the factors leading to e-voting adoption successes and failures. Secondary data on e-voting adoption across the world was used in this study.Results indicate that concerns about accuracy, lack of trust, lack of secrecy of votes, lack of verifiability, secrecy of source codes and lack of support from political parties are among the factors leading to failure in e-voting adoption and it vary from country to country.The findings of this study can help in the determination of the necessary … Show more

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“…As a subject of close investigation, the reasons that led to the rejection of e-voting and political debates around it have been analyzed by a number of scholars around the world , especially in the context of partisanship politics and political polarization (Hall and Loeber, 2010), debates on trust in government (Salem, 2007;Krimmer, 2012;Beaulieu, 2016;Puiggalí et al, 2017), socioeconomic and technological challenges of e-voting adoption (Maaten, 2004;Schaupp and Carter, 2005;Breuer and Trechsel, 2006;Zissis and Lekkas, 2011;Kassen, 2014; TG 14,2 Ayawli et al, 2015;Gibson et al, 2016), variability of e-voting casts (Neff, 2001;Krimmer, 2016), though the vast majority of case studies have been focused on exploring developed rather than emerging countries. There are a solid number of case studies done in the context of developing nations but most of them investigated the development of e-voting technologies in various manifestations and reflections and only rarely study the reasons that led to the rejection of e-voting per se (Wolchok et al, 2010;Alvarez et al, 2011;Mohanty et al, 2019).…”
Section: Academic Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a subject of close investigation, the reasons that led to the rejection of e-voting and political debates around it have been analyzed by a number of scholars around the world , especially in the context of partisanship politics and political polarization (Hall and Loeber, 2010), debates on trust in government (Salem, 2007;Krimmer, 2012;Beaulieu, 2016;Puiggalí et al, 2017), socioeconomic and technological challenges of e-voting adoption (Maaten, 2004;Schaupp and Carter, 2005;Breuer and Trechsel, 2006;Zissis and Lekkas, 2011;Kassen, 2014; TG 14,2 Ayawli et al, 2015;Gibson et al, 2016), variability of e-voting casts (Neff, 2001;Krimmer, 2016), though the vast majority of case studies have been focused on exploring developed rather than emerging countries. There are a solid number of case studies done in the context of developing nations but most of them investigated the development of e-voting technologies in various manifestations and reflections and only rarely study the reasons that led to the rejection of e-voting per se (Wolchok et al, 2010;Alvarez et al, 2011;Mohanty et al, 2019).…”
Section: Academic Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%