In the past, voting was conducted using a manual system that was heavily reliant on polling booths. A geographical barrier existed. A voter can only vote from one booth at a time. Because voting was done via ballot paper, all ballot papers had to be hand examined before being counted at the end of the procedure. The goal of this framework is to release voters from the constraints of voting at a certain polling station and allow them to exercise their right to vote from any of the polling stations located throughout a state or country. Although this procedure was reliable, it was not scientific. Slowly, but steadily, this voting process is changing. In most developing nations, the process of electing a democratic government is now primarily limited to collecting votes in a voter's individual constituency. This means that an elector can only exercise his or her voting rights at a polling centre allotted to him or her. The authors of this research attempted to investigate the challenges of voting in a polling centre and propose a framework for overcoming these challenges through the usage of ICT infrastructure.
Author(S) Details
Shalabh Agarwal
Department of Computer Science, St. Xavier’s College (Autonomous), Kolkata, West Bengal, India.
Asoke Nath
IGNOU, S. C. 2802, Kolkata, India.
Dipayan Chowdhury
IGNOU, S. C. 2802, Kolkata, India.
View Book:- https://stm.bookpi.org/RAMRCS-V8/article/view/5746
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