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Full Description
This book focuses on the more than 8,000 local elections administrators in counties, municipalities, and townships who largely manage the key administrative processes of elections, work with campaigns and candidates, design voting materials and choose voting equipment, staff early, and Election Day polling locations, and communicate with and educate voters. They are the frontline of democracy, and this is the first book that explores who becomes an election administrator; their opinions about election reform and election integrity; how LEOs responded to the unique challenges of the 2020 election which included misinformation and even death threats; and how to move forward to ensure a sustainable, diverse, and sustainable community.
Contents
Chapter 1 : Understanding the Election Administrators on the Frontline of Democracy.- Chapter 2 : A Demographic and Professional Profile of the Frontline Workers of American Elections.- Chapter 3: Electing America's Election Officials.- Chapter 4: Expanding the Pipeline: Turnover, Diversity, and a Representative LEO Bureaucracy.- Chapter 5: The Ethos of Local Election Administration.- Chapter 6: Comparing Elite and Public Opinion on Election Administration and Reform.- Chapter 7: How Local Election Officials Educate Voters about Voting Requirements and Election Reform.- Chapter 8: How Private Philanthropy Supercharged the 2020 Election: The Audacious Story of the USC Schwarzenegger Institute and the Center for Tech and Civic Life in Local Election Administration.- Chapter 9:Threats and Harassment of Election Officials Resulting from the 2020 Election.- Chapter 10: People Versus Places: The Unrepresentative Nature of Local Election Administration.- Chapter 11: Appendix: Methodological Considerations for Surveys of Local Elections Officials.