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Public Responsibilities for Electoral Fraud Beyond Correlative Rights and Duties
Author(s) -
Leon Trakman
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
utrecht journal of international and european law
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2053-5341
DOI - 10.5334/ujiel.de
Subject(s) - political science , voting , supreme court , correlative , democracy , government (linguistics) , law and economics , citizen journalism , law , public administration , sociology , politics , philosophy , linguistics
This article develops the notion that a government has a public responsibility to prevent electoral fraud in a way that extends beyond the protections conferred by an electorate’s directly correlative right to voting freedom. Focusing on electoral freedom and voter fraud in electoral systems, it presents theoretical arguments for holding governments responsible arising from the incomplete or unclear nature of juristic rights, powers, and duties. It holds that such public responsibilities are functionally necessary, in the interests of a truly inclusive participatory democracy. The article uses illustrations of fair elections globally, and in the United States in particular, including the divided 2014 US Supreme Court decision, US v. Texas, in which the majority denied the right to vote to prisoners and parolees who are disproportionately represented by ethnic minorities

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