ABSTRACT

E-voting is the use of electronic means in the casting of the vote at political elections or referendums. This book provides an overview of e-voting related case-law worldwide and explains how judicial decisions impact e-voting development. With contributions by renowned experts on thirteen countries, the authors discuss e-voting both from controlled environments, such as voting machines in polling stations, and uncontrolled ones, including internet voting. Each chapter examines a group of country-specific leading judicial decisions on e-voting and their likely impact on its future development. Reference is made to emerging standards on e-voting such as the Recommendation Rec(2004)11 of the Council of Europe, the only international instrument on e-voting regulation, and to other countries' case-law. The work provides a broader, informative and easily accessible perspective on the historical, political and legal aspects of an otherwise very technical subject, and contributes to a better understanding of the significance of case law and its impact in shaping e-voting's future development. The book will be significantly useful to anyone with an interest in e-voting, in particular decision makers and officials, researchers and academia, as well as NGOs and providers of e-voting solutions.

chapter |20 pages

E-Voting

What Do Judges Say?

part |108 pages

The Principles

chapter |22 pages

Germany

The Public Nature of Elections and its Consequences for E-Voting

chapter |20 pages

E-Voting in Austria

Legal Determination Matters

part |88 pages

Back to Politics

chapter |18 pages

E-Voting Case Law

A Swiss Perspective

chapter |28 pages

Electronic Voting in Australia

chapter |16 pages

Venezuela

Finding the Relationship between E-Voting and Democracy

chapter |6 pages

Conclusions