Case Studies on Electoral Management
- Afghanistan: An Electoral Management Body Struggles to Deal with Executive Interference
- Armenia: Electoral Administration in South Caucasus
- Bosnia and Herzegovina: The Challenges of an Independent EMB Model
- Cambodia: Lack of Confidence in the National Election Committee
- Canada: Stability, Independence and Public Trust
- Costa Rica: The Supreme Tribunal of Elections
- Haiti: a Crisis of Credibility
- Kenya: The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission
- Liberia: The National Elections Commission
- Mexico: A Sophisticated Scheme for Addressing a Serious Distrust Issue
- Nigeria: Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)
- Norway: Governmental, Decentralized and Trusted
- Senegal: Sub-Saharan Multiparty Elections
- Seychelles: A New Electoral Commission
- South Korea: An Independent and Neutral Electoral Management Body
- Sweden: Governmental in Form, Independent in Practice: A Decentralized Election Management System
- Timor-Leste: Election Administration
- Tonga: A New Commission in a Small Island State
- The United Kingdom: Electoral Governance in Transition?
- The United States Administration of Elections: Decentralized, Pre-modern and Contented
- Tunisia: The Independent High Authority for the Elections
- Fiji: A New System Under Pressure
- Republic of Georgia: A Commission in Tranistion
- India: The Embodiment of EMB Independence
- Iraq: International Institution Design
- Japan: Mixed Model Electoral Management for a Mixed Parallel Electoral System
- Lesotho: Building a Reputation
- Spain: Mixed Model Electoral Management Becomes Well Established
- Mozambique: A Need for Depoliticization
- Ukraine: The Long Road to Politically Independent Election Administration
- Uruguay: The Electoral Court - A Fourth Branch of Government?
- Vanuatu: Limitations to the Independence of the EMB
- Yemen: An Emerging Independent EMB
- Zimbabwe: A New Era in Election Management
- Using Performance Benchmark Standards to Improve Electoral Management