Join us to investigate the difficulties with Papua New Guinea’s electoral roll.

This is a hybrid event. To attend online, sign up using the ‘Register’ button and a Zoom link will be emailed to you after you have registered.

The difficulties with Papua New Guinea’s electoral roll are not limited to ‘missing names’. There is also a serious issue that voter identification processes are frequently degenerate or absent. Voting without identification, in turn, has important effects on the logic of electoral politics. In this presentation, we show that (known) turnout figures and enrolments are in many cases implausible. We contextualise this by mapping observations of 744 polling locations in the 2022 national general election, noting that high turnouts occur in areas in which voter identification is frequently absent. We then consider surveys conducted after the 2012, 2017 and 2022 elections which directly ask respondents if they are on the roll, and if they voted. After assessing the complexities of interpretation inherent in these questions, we show that the association between them is looser in the areas with implausible turnouts and enrolments. For the 2022 election, we show that survey measures have a tight relationship with direct observations of roll use, and its absence. Whilst our interpretation of the survey-side association prevents direct measure of the degree to which there is compliance with the roll, it suggests weak and waning compliance. Finally, we offer some interpretations of the likely consequences of this.

Event Speakers

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Research Fellow, State Society and Governance in Melanesia

My PhD, completed in 2011, examined transformations in the kinship and customary authority systems amongst Halia-speakers in Buka, Autonomous Region of Bougainville, as these traditions have become

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Coombs Seminar Room B

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