What is Electoral Integrity? Conceptualising Election Quality in an Age of Complexity

Toby S. James, Holly Ann Garnett

Research output: Book/ReportBook

Abstract

There are worldwide concerns about the quality of elections and democracy, but also an ambiguity in academia, the international community and popular discourse about how to define and measure good elections. This book develops an original concept of electoral integrity based around human empowerment. Elections serve a purpose: they should give citizens voice, empower the everyday citizen against the powerful and act as mechanisms for political equality. Secondly, it argues that there have been major societal ‘megatrends’ meaning that the holding of elections have moved from the modern era to an age of complexity. This describes an era of demographic, technological, legal, economic, and political complexity and fluidity. The greater connection between nodes of activities in the electoral process means that elections held in one part of the world can be very quickly affected by actors and developments elsewhere. Thirdly, it provides new measurement tools to assess election quality.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherCambridge University Press
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 11 Oct 2025

Keywords

  • elections
  • electoral integrity
  • democracy
  • democratic backsliding
  • democratisation

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