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Encyclopaedia   Youth and Elections   ELECTION MANAGEMENT AND VOTING PROCESSES  
Data Collection

To accurately assess the participation of young people in electoral processes, it is essential to have reliable data on youth registration, voter turnout, youth EMB staff, observers, candidates, and memberships of political parties. These kinds of data can help EMBs develop youth strategies and implement targeted interventions to increase youth participation. In many contexts, such data are mostly missing, and data collection remains incomplete. 

Data on youth voting 

The UNSC Resolution 2250–mandated progress study, entitled The Missing Peace: Independent Progress Study on Youth, Peace and Security, (2018) describes the significant data gap on youth participation: “despite extensive global data on overall voting behavior and registration, there was nonetheless a severe lack of disaggregated datasets for youth within the majority of government electoral databases, signaling that most governments – including in developed countries – do not effectively monitor the percentage of youth vote, or make it publicly available. Out of 202 countries and territories examined in a baseline study, only seven had available government recorded and publicly shared data on actual youth voting patterns, 91 had survey-based data available, 10 had incomplete government data, and 94 had no data available at all on youth voting trends.”[i] EMBs can address this situation by keeping robust age-segregated data on youth registration and voter turn-out.


[i] Graeme Simpson (lead author), The Missing Peace: Independent Progress Study on Youth, Peace and Security, (United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)/Peacebuilding Support Office (PBSO),