Electronic Australian elections : Verifiability of accuracy is a design goal, which must be mandated by law and deliberately designed into electronic electoral processes

Journal article


Teague, Vanessa and Keyzer, Patrick. (2020). Electronic Australian elections : Verifiability of accuracy is a design goal, which must be mandated by law and deliberately designed into electronic electoral processes. Law in Context. 37(1), pp. 42-65. https://doi.org/10.26826/law-in-context.v37i1.119
AuthorsTeague, Vanessa and Keyzer, Patrick
Abstract

Electronic voting and counting are increasingly common and have been adopted in a number of Australian jurisdictions. Unfortunately, there is evidence that e-voting systems lack transparency. At present there are reasonable solutions for poll-site e-voting but none for remote paperless Internet voting. Although there are reasonable methods for statistical audits of electronically counted election results, Australian elections do not use them. The authors argue that a purposive approach should be taken to relevant electoral laws to ensure that genuine scrutiny of electronic electoral processes can be undertaken. This would require the source code and the voting data to be made available for testing. The authors recommend a number of legislative reforms to ensure the verifiability of e-voting. These reforms need to be undertaken to ensure that Australian elections are accurate, and consistent with the constitutional requirement of direct choice by electors.

Keywordselections; electronic voting; scrutiny; security; verifiability
Year2020
JournalLaw in Context
Journal citation37 (1), pp. 42-65
PublisherFederation Press Pty Ltd
ISSN0811-5796
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.26826/law-in-context.v37i1.119
Open accessOpen access
Research or scholarlyResearch
Page range42-65
Publisher's version
License
File Access Level
Open
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online13 Nov 2020
Publication process dates
Deposited01 Sep 2021
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