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CHAPTER
ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1
Background of the Study
E-Voting is an election
system that allows a voter to record his or her secure and secret ballot electronically.
In 2004; it's estimated that approximately 30 percent of the voting population
in the United State used some form of e-voting technology, including direct
electronic recording (DER) touch screen or optical scanners, to record their
vote for president. (Vihti,
2006). Electronic votes are stored digitally in a
storage medium such as a tape cartridge, diskette, or smart card before being
sent to a centralized location where tabulation programs compile and tabulate
results. Advocates of e-voting point out that electronic voting can reduce
election costs and increase civic participation by making the voting process
more convenient. Critics maintain that without a paper trail, recounts are more
difficult and electronic ballot manipulation, or even poorly-written programme
code, could affect election results. (Wahlstift, 2000)
There is an ongoing
discussion in many countries about e-voting via Internet or electronic distance
voting. While some kind of e-voting is already widely used by society, organizations
and private industry voting needs as well as non professional/ non-official
polling, the situation is quite different when it comes to national elections
and referendums. Several countries are considering the introduction of e-voting
and are running a variety of pilot projects. Because of security concerns there
is, in some countries, a strong opposition to any kind of e-voting, but
especially when it comes to the use of the Internet for voting at national
elections or referendums.
1.2 Meaning
of E-voting
E-voting is short for "electronic
voting' and refers to the option of using electronic means to vote in
referendums and elections. There are systems such as DRE (Direct electronic
recording) voting machines that record the vote without that vote being transmitted
over the Internet or another network. The interface of a DRE machine can be a
touch screen or a scanner that scans the ballot paper where the voter marked
the vote. The vote is then registered and stored in the voting machine. Then
there is the voting over the Internet that uses a Personal Computer (PC) with
an Internet-connection to cast the vote and send it to be stored in another
remote computer. Personal Digital Assistants (PDA"s), telephones or mobile
phones can also be used to cast a vote electronically.
There are a wide
variety of e-voting set ups, ranging from the casting of the vote with the aid
of an electronic device (voting machines) inside computer intelligence polling
station to casting a vote anywhere outside the polling station at a PC and
transmitting the vote via the Internet.
1.3
Statement of the Problem
The basic problem of
this study is to examine the Design and Implementation of
Electronic Voting System in Curbing
Election Rigging. Case study of a Student Union
Government in particular FCE, Abeokuta and
how:
i.
E- Voting
enhances qualitative and quantitative Election in Student Union Government
ii.
E- Voting
encourages fair and reliable elections
iii.
E-Voting can be
used to curb election rigging in Student Union Government
1.4 Purpose
of the Study
The purpose of this
study is to model a critical analysis on Design and Implementation of Electronic
Voting System in Curbing Election Rigging.
Moreover E-Voting has
substantial roles to play in other to ensure effective, fair, and reliable
election in the Student Union Government.
1.5
Significance of the Study
When this work is
completed using all the information and data at hand, with the retrieved one in
respect of this research, it is expected to give an account of the Design and
Implementation of Electronic Voting System
in Curbing Election Rigging.
1.6 Scope / Delimitation of the Study
This study is
restricted to Design and implementation of Electronic Voting System in
Curbing Election Rigging. However, the
scope of this research work would be restricted to only
Student Union Government, Federal
College of Education, Osiele Abeokuta.
1.7 Research
Questions
This study will make
use of these various research questions below:
i.
Does E-Voting
provide solution to specific problems in election?
ii.
Does E-Voting
enhance qualitative and quantitative accurate achievement election?
iii.
Does E- Voting
encourage the voter the vote at their own comfort?
iv.
Does E- Voting
guarantees effective election in curbing election rigging in Student Union Government?
v.
Does E-Voting has
capacity to handle difficult elections in Student Union Government'?
1.8 Research
Hypotheses
Ho1: There is significant relationship between E-Voting and the
election.
Ho2: There is significant relationship between E-Voting and
achievement of election.
Ho3: There is significant relationship between E- Voting and Student
Union Government.
Ho4: There is no significant relationship between effective,
reliable, and fair election and
E-Voting
Ho5: There
is no significant relationship between E-Voting and difficult elections in
Student Union Government.
1.9 OPERATIONAL DEFINITION OF TERMS
DIRECT-RECORDING
ELECTRONIC (DRE) VOTING SYSTEM: records votes by means
of a ballot display provided with mechanical or electro-optical components that
can be activated by the voter (typically buttons or a touch screen); that
processes data with computer software; and that records voting data and ballot
images in memory components
PAPER-BASED
ELECTRONIC VOTING SYSTEM: paper-based voting systems
originated as a system where votes are cast and counted by hand, using paper
ballots.
INFORMATION
AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY: This is referred to
those technologies that determine the efficiency and effectiveness with which
we communicate and the devices that allow us handle information.
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