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Peace engineering: The contribution of blockchain systems to the e-voting process

Patricia Baudier, Galina Kondrateva, Chantal Ammi, Éric Seulliet

2020Technological Forecasting and Social Change104 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In recent decades, several countries have faced political tensions due to citizens' perceptions that their elections are fraudulent; some electors have even chosen not to vote because they believe that the results may be falsified. Thus, electoral fraud is a major issue. E-governance and e-voting are now being used in many countries, some of which are investigating blockchain solutions. The aim of this study is to investigate the potential contributions of blockchain technology to peace on a worldwide level by securing voting systems. Unfortunately, this technology is complex and could potentially generate conflict between actors in elections. Taking an exploratory approach, the authors chose a qualitative method to address this specific topic. Election observers and blockchain experts were interviewed to identify the technology's strengths and weaknesses. Our results emphasize the importance of trust and human factors in the voting process.

Topics & Concepts

VotingBlockchainProcess (computing)Political sciencePublic relationsCorporate governanceStrengths and weaknessesPoliticsComputer securityBusinessComputer scienceLawPsychologySocial psychologyOperating systemFinanceBlockchain Technology Applications and SecurityInternet Traffic Analysis and Secure E-votingPrivacy, Security, and Data Protection