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12 Election L.J. 1 (2013)

handle is hein.journals/enlwjr12 and id is 1 raw text is: The Party Line:
The Value of Election Observation
Paul Gronke and Daniel Tokaji

L EGAL AND POLICY EVALUATIONS of election
administration practices often depend on key
pieces of evidence that aren't yet available. A
well-worn example is the fact that, until just a few
years ago, we did not know precisely how many
American citizens actually turned out to vote.
Some jurisdictions continued to report turnout as
the total number of votes cast for the highest office
on the ballot, even though some voters skip this con-
test. Even if that number is very small, it was sur-
prising that, in the third century of American
democracy, this most basic indicator of the perfor-
mance of our elections system-how many citizens
actually cast a ballot-was not known precisely.
Happily, efforts to improve the completeness
and consistency of information about elections
have yielded tremendous improvements in the
past decade. This is reflected in a burst of scholar-
ship on election administration in the U.S. We
have also seen increased reliance on social scien-
tific analyses in election litigation regarding
such matters as voting technology, early voting,
and voter identification.
Despite these improvements, there is one
aspect of election studies where the United States
lags well behind the rest of the world: election
observation. International governmental organi-
zations like the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe and the European Union
regularly send teams of election observers to
measure, monitor, and evaluate election conduct
throughout the globe. These efforts are comple-
mented by the efforts of observers attached to
non-governmental organizations, some interna-
tional and some domestic, some well known
like the Carter Center or the National Democratic
Institute, and some nearly invisible. Collectively,
the information gathered by these organizations

serves as an invaluable resource for evaluating,
comparing, and improving election performance.
In the United States, however, systematic use of
election observation remains the exception rather
than the norm. Election Law Journal published
one of the first scientific studies based on informa-
tion gleaned from election observation, Long
Lines at Polling Stations? Observations from an
Election Day Field Study, coauthored by Douglas
Spencer and Zachary Markovits. But there is little
published research arising from the observation of
U.S. elections.
In stark contrast, the study and practice of inter-
national election observation is nearly an academic
specialty. New academic initiatives such as the
Electoral Integrity Project, a research partnership
between the John F. Kennedy School at Harvard
University, the Department of Government and
International Relations at the University of Sydney,
and the Project on International Election Monitor-
ing at Duke University, signal growing scholarly
interest in the field.
In this issue, we are fortunate to have Emily
Beaulieu, Assistant Professor of Political Science
at the University of Kentucky and author of the
forthcoming book Electoral Protest and Democracy
in the Developing World, serve as guest co-editor
for a symposium on international election observa-
tion. As Professor Beaulieu notes in her intro-
duction, international election observation, or
monitoring, has become an international norm.
What remains a topic for debate and reflection is
what contribution observation ultimately makes to
the quality of the democratic experience.
In consultation with Professor Beaulieu, we deci-
ded that readers of the Journal would benefit most
from reflections about election observation from
practitioners in the field. She has assembled an

1

ELECTION LAW JOURNAL
Volume 12, Number 1, 2013
© Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
DOI: 10.1089/elj.2013.1211

Editorial

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