“…Over the last two decades, States have continuously revised whether and how people who make their permanent residence outside the boundaries of their country of origins may participate in their home-country elections (Bauböck, 2005;Ellis, Navarro, Morales, Gratschew, & Braun, 2007;Hutcheson & Arrighi, 2015;Lafleur, 2015;Turcu & Urbatsch, 2014). Therefore, the literature on external voting has expanded and mostly focused on the content, the application, and the diffusion of such external voting rights across countries (Bermudez & Lafleur, 2015;Earnest, 2015;Ellis et al, 2007;Gamlen, 2018;Hartmann, 2015;Hutcheson & Arrighi, 2015;Jaulin & Smith, 2015;Lafleur, 2011bLafleur, , 2015. While these contributions demonstrate that implementation of such enfranchisement rights contrasts sharply from one country to one another, other works have turned to question how they could boost or hinder external voters' turnout in home-country elections (Bermudez, 2010;Lafleur & Calderon, 2011;McIlwaine & Bermudez, 2015;Tager, 2006;Tintori, 2012), which is overall low (Kivisto, 2001;Waldinger & Fitzgerald, 2004).…”