Academic literature on the topic 'Confirmation Voting'

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Journal articles on the topic "Confirmation Voting"

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Babichenko, Yakov, Oren Dean, and Moshe Tennenholtz. "Sequential Voting with Confirmation Network." Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 297 (July 19, 2019): 19–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.4204/eptcs.297.2.

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Holmes, Danae V., and Philip Kortum. "Alternative Review Screen Design for Electronic Voting Systems." International Journal of Technology and Human Interaction 13, no. 1 (January 2017): 82–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijthi.2017010105.

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Verifying a ballot for correctness in an election is a critical task for the voter. Previous work has shown that up to 30% of the ballot can be changed without being noticed by more than half of the voters. In response to this ballot weakness, this study evaluated the usability and viability of alternative ballot verification methods in an electronic voting medium. Three verification methods were tested: end-of-ballot, in-line confirmation, and dual confirmation. In-line and dual confirmation perform similarly to end-of-ballot confirmation in terms of effectiveness. The most efficient method is end-of-ballot review, and dual confirmation produced the longest time spent on the review screen. End-of-ballot confirmation produced the highest satisfaction ratings, though survey results indicated that dual confirmation may be the most appropriate method in terms of voting. Additional research in the field is the next step in exploring these confirmation methods.
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Cameron, Charles M., Jonathan P. Kastellec, and Jee-Kwang Park. "Voting for Justices: Change and Continuity in Confirmation Voting 1937–2010." Journal of Politics 75, no. 2 (April 2013): 283–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022381613000017.

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Alam, Kazi Md Rokibul, Shinsuke Tamura, Shuji Taniguchi, and Tatsuro Yanase. "An Anonymous Voting Scheme based on Confirmation Numbers." IEEJ Transactions on Electronics, Information and Systems 130, no. 11 (2010): 2065–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1541/ieejeiss.130.2065.

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Overby, L. Marvin, Beth M. Henschen, Michael H. Walsh, and Julie Strauss. "Courting Constituents? An Analysis of the Senate Confirmation Vote on Justice Clarence Thomas." American Political Science Review 86, no. 4 (December 1992): 997–1003. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1964351.

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The increasing public attention paid to Supreme Court nominations has elevated the salience of Senate confirmation battles, raising interesting questions about the impact of constituency preferences on senators' voting behavior. In this article, we explore this relationship using a logistical regression model to examine the impacts of African-American constituency size and the proximity of reelection on the roll call behavior of senators on the Clarence Thomas confirmation vote. Our analyses indicate that these factors were both statistically and substantively significant in the Thomas case. We conclude by discussing the theoretical and practical implications of such findings.
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Cameron, Charles M., Albert D. Cover, and Jeffrey A. Segal. "Senate Voting on Supreme Court Nominees: A Neoinstitutional Model." American Political Science Review 84, no. 2 (June 1990): 525–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1963533.

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We develop and test a neoinstitutional model of Senate roll call voting on nominees to the Supreme Court. The statistical model assumes that Senators examine the characteristics of nominees and use their roll call votes to establish an electorally attractive position on the nominees. The model is tested with probit estimates on the 2,054 confirmation votes from Earl Warren to Anthony Kennedy. The model performs remarkably well in predicting the individual votes of Senators to confirm or reject nominees. Senators routinely vote to confirm nominees who are perceived as well qualified and ideologically proximate to Senators' constituents. When nominees are less well qualified and are relatively distant, however, Senators' votes depend to a large degree on the political environment, especially the status of the president.
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Basinger, Scott J., and Maxwell Mak. "The “New Normal” in Supreme Court Confirmation Voting: Hyper-Partisanship in the Trump Era." Congress & the Presidency 47, no. 3 (May 13, 2020): 365–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07343469.2020.1733708.

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Bernard, Josef, Tomáš Kostelecký, and Martin Šimon. "Are there spatially contextual influences on voter behaviour even in a relatively nationalised party system? The case of Czechia." Geografie 119, no. 3 (2014): 240–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.37040/geografie2014119030240.

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The paper discusses the contextual effects on voting behaviour. Part of the Czech professional literature concludes that spatial contextual effects on voting behaviour in Czechia are weak and that the spatial patterns of election results can be basically explained as a reflection of territorial differences in social structure, i.e. compositionally. This study examines the existence of contextual effects using spatially very detailed data. When the determinants of election results are studied at the municipal level by spatial statistical methods, areas of different size can be found in Czechia, in which election results can’t be explained by the composition of voters. Instead it becomes more appropriate to consider the contextual effects impacting on them. Some results of our analysis can be interpreted as a manifestation of neighbourhood effects, unambiguous confirmation of its existence, however, remains open.
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Rosacker, Kirsten M., and Robert E. Rosacker. "Voting is a right: a decade of societal, technological and experiential progress towards the goal of remote-access voting." Transforming Government: People, Process and Policy 14, no. 5 (June 29, 2020): 701–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/tg-03-2020-0053.

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Purpose This study aims to revisit and extends the work of Rosacker and Rosacker (2012) that called for increased interdisciplinary efforts to address and solve the critical issues (critical success factors) facing technologically-enabled remote-access voting platforms. It builds upon the background platform presented there, which included an historical timeline of information and communication technologies and an e-voting literature review, and extends that work by providing a state-of-the-art update and review of the rapidly changing voter environment from societal, technological and experiential studies over the past decade. Specific focus is directed at technology-enabled, remote-access voting, while also considering the important role technological advances can play in improving voter registration/confirmation procedures. Design/methodology/approach First, a brief review of significant societal and technological changes, including the rapid evolution of the internet of things, is undertaken to frame the discussion. Second, a sample of several technology-enabled, remote-access voting experiments are reviewed and critiqued. Third, currently available technical solutions targeting technology-enabled voter registration and vote casting are offered as the next step in the process that will ultimately lead to remote-access voting becoming widely deployed across smart devices. Finally, some contemporaneous conclusions are tendered. Findings Society and technology-enabled devices have each witnessed myriad changes and advancements in the second decade of the 21st century. These have led to numerous remote-access voting experiments across the globe that have overwhelmingly proven the concept of technology-enabled, remote-access voting to be viable while also identifying/reasserting issues (critical success factors) that continue to restrain its full implementation. Importantly, none of the problems identified is fatal to the concept. Originality/value This study considers the issue of technologically-enabled, remote-access voting focussing on the impacts associated with the portfolio of recent societal and technological advancements including the many vexing concerns and issues presented by the coronavirus pandemic. Social distancing is limiting access to the traditional methods of in-person voting for both election officials and voters bringing into question the November 2020 US national election. Calls for expanded mail voting options and the requisite federal funding required to support these efforts are increasing, widespread and broadly persuasive. Wholly missing in this debate is an exhaustive consideration and discussion of technologically enhanced, remote-access voting systems and their role in filling the void.
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Alves, João, and António Pinto. "On the Implementation of a Blockchain-Assisted Academic Council Electronic Vote System." Smart Cities 6, no. 1 (January 12, 2023): 291–315. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/smartcities6010014.

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The digitisation of administrative tasks and processes is a reality nowadays, translating into added value such as agility in process management, or simplified access to stored data. The digitisation of processes of decision-making in collegiate bodies, such as Academic Councils, is not yet a common reality. Voting acts are still carried out in person, or at most in online meetings, without having a real confirmation of the vote of each element. This is particularly complex to achieve in remote meeting scenarios, where connection breaks or interruptions of audio or video streams may exist. A new digital platform was already previously proposed. It considered decision-making, by voting in Academic Councils, to be supported by a system that guarantees the integrity of the decisions taken, even when meeting online. Our previous work mainly considered the overall design. In this work, we bettered the design and specification of our previous proposal and describe the implemented prototype, and validate and discuss the obtained results.
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Books on the topic "Confirmation Voting"

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Britain, Great. Companies (Shareholders' Rights to Voting Confirmations) Regulations 2020. Stationery Office, The, 2020.

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Votive Holder, Luke 8:16, Confirmation: 2 Piece, 2 1/2 X 3 3/4 Fine Ceramic W/Gold Accents, No One Lights a Lamp and Hides It in a Jar or on a Stand,. Russ Berrie and Company, Inc., 2000.

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Book chapters on the topic "Confirmation Voting"

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Brunet, James, Athanasios Demetri Pananos, and Aleksander Essex. "Review Your Choices: When Confirmation Pages Break Ballot Secrecy in Online Elections." In Electronic Voting, 36–52. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-15911-4_3.

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AbstractOnline voting systems typically display a confirmation screen allowing voters to confirm their selections before casting. This paper considers whether a network-based observer can extract information about voter selections from the length of the exchanged network data.We conducted a detailed analysis of the Simply Voting implementation, which had randomly varying lengths of exchanged data due to dynamic page content and gzip compression. We demonstrated that we could correctly guess a voter’s selection with accuracy values ranging up to 100% in some instances. Even on more complex ballots, we generally could still rule out some combinations of candidates. We conducted a coordinated disclosure with the vendor and worked with them to roll out a mitigation.To their credit, this discovery (and therefore its fix) was made possible by their willingness to provide a publicly accessible demo, which, as we will show, remains a rarity in the industry.
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"Electronic Governance Systems." In Anonymous Security Systems and Applications, 219–43. IGI Global, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-1649-3.ch012.

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As one of applications in electronic governance, this chapter develops an electronic voting (e-voting) system. After discussing requirements for e-voting systems and reviewing existing approaches, an e-voting system is developed based on confirmation numbers and signature pairs. Here, e-voting systems must satisfy requirements intrinsically contradicting each other, e.g. they must convince anyone that votes from only and all eligible voters had been counted, but at the same time to protect voters from a coercer that forces voters to choose its supporting candidate, correspondences between voters and their votes must be concealed from anyone including election authorities and voters themselves. The developed e-voting system successfully satisfies these requirements. However, it must be noted that these requirement are satisfied under the assumption that at least one of mutually independent multiple authorities is honest.
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Tollenaar, Nicolaes. "The US Chapter 11 Plan Procedure." In Pre-Insolvency Proceedings, 114–60. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198799924.003.0006.

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The chapter begins with an outline of the US Chapter 11 plan procedure. It briefly discusses the proposals of the American Bankruptcy Institute (ABI) for reform of Chapter 11. It then discusses the key features of the US Chapter 11 plan procedure, including the right to propose a plan, the permitted content of the plan, the voting in classes, and the criteria for confirmation and cramdown. Finally, it looks at criticisms of the US system, which include the costs and extent of judicial involvement, the duration of the automatic say, the exclusivity period, the best interests and feasibility test, the wording of the absolute priority rule, and the intrusiveness of the cramdown powers under US law.
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Tollenaar, Nicolaes. "Framework for a Pre-Insolvency Plan Procedure." In Pre-Insolvency Proceedings, 188–250. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198799924.003.0008.

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This chapter provides a high-level outline of what pre-insolvency proceedings might look like in an ideal world, drawing from the discussion in the previous chapters and the lessons learnt from the US Chapter 11 procedure and the English scheme of arrangement. It outlines the general characteristics of the procedure and required flanking measures. These include speed and efficiency, flexibility, a temporary stay, provision to reject burdensome and retain valuable contracts, and the ability of the court to make early determinations. Key features of the proposed plan mechanism are then discussed, including entry to the procedure, the right to propose a plan, the appointment of a supervisor, the commercial content of the plan, the voting in class, acceptance of the plan, and the criteria for confirmation and cramdown. It also considers the ability to deal with third-party liabilities and disputed claims. Finally, it looks at the relevance of the proposed procedure in practice and the remaining need for efficient liquidation procedures.
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Conference papers on the topic "Confirmation Voting"

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Alam, Kazi Md Rokibul, and Shinsuke Tamura. "Electronic voting using confirmation numbers." In 2009 IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man and Cybernetics - SMC. IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icsmc.2009.5346787.

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