Blog — The Electoral Integrity Project EIP

The Global Electoral Integrity Report 2024

The Global Electoral Integrity Report 2024 has been published by the Electoral Integrity Project.

The report evaluates election quality around the world finds that elections in Sweden, Austria and Denmark hold contests which most empowers their citizens. 

The Electoral Integrity Global Report is published each year to provide data on election quality based on expert opinion.  The new release adds 42 new contests to the PEI dataset based on contests held in 2023. This report explores in more detail eight key contests in 2023: general elections in Zimbabwe, Turkey, Argentina, Nigeria, and Thailand, the presidential election in Egypt, and legislative elections in the Netherlands and Poland.

Like in previous years, indicators of the integrity of the campaign environment were the lowest scoring stages of the electoral cycle, with campaign finance and campaign media again at the bottom. Among the four key principles of electoral integrity, the deliberative environment likewise averaged the lowest scores.  Election procedures, the vote count, and the results stages of the electoral cycle were on average the top-scoring.

The release of the data also presents a number of changes to the methodology of aggregating the overall indices – which are widely used by international policy makers and academics. This follows a move to measure electoral integrity in terms of whether elections empower citizens and deliver democracy. There are now some additional questions in the survey designed to capture whether elections achieve this.  This represents theoretical work which will be published in a forthcoming book with Cambridge University Press.

The 4th iEIP International Online Conference in Review

The Electoral Integrity Project held the 4th Annual online conference during July 8-12 2024.

Elections are crucial to achieving democratic governance. This year’s virtual workshop focussed on the three major components of electoral integrity: electoral justice, participation and contestation.

The event was covened by Holly Ann Garnett (Royal Military College / Queen's University, Canada), Toby James (University of East Anglia, UK), Anna Unger (Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary).

2024 was widely billed as the ‘year of elections’ with 2 billion people headed to the polls. Half way through the year, we asked an expert panel to examine how elections fared in their countries. What were the concerns ahead of election day? Did they come to pass? If not, why? Was electoral misinformation a problem? If so, how? The opening included experts discussing elections in India, Mexico, South Africa, Hungary and the UK.

The workshop also included a roundtable organised by IFES on EMB interdependence. Many of the impediments to EMB independence are widely known, and new research indicates that EMB autonomy is under increasing attack by governments. How to maintain EMB independence when interdependence with government agencies is required, however, is infrequently discussed and under-researched. The roundtable explored this challenge and ongoing work relevant to this topic by the Global Network for Securing Electoral Integrity (GNSEI), a new platform for election-focused organizations and networks to advance electoral integrity in the face of critical threats to democracy. Following GNSEI consultations with EMBs, election practitioners, international NGOs, citizen observer groups and networks, international donors and IGOs, the Network has drafted guidelines to support election management bodies (EMBs) to assert, protect, and promote their independence as they carry out their mandates in collaboration with other public institutions.

Overall the conference included over 300 participants from around the world, sharing research-based ideas and conversations about how to improve electoral integrity.

All sessions are available to watch on the YouTube Channel