Four voting booths in a room with a flag on the window background behind them.

Elections and Election Administration Paper Series

The Executive Session on Elections and Election Administration is a three-year program that brings leading election officials from across the country and political spectrum together with academics and experts to discuss the complex challenges facing election administration.

Since the beginning of 2024, the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation at the Harvard Kennedy School has been convening the Executive Session for Elections and Election Administration. Continuing at least through early 2027, the Executive Session brings together a small, bipartisan group of local and state election officials from across the country, along with a handful of academics and experts, to meet and discuss the complex problems facing election administration today and the challenges anticipated in the years ahead. Convening in-person only over the course of three days, twice a year, the team has been working collaboratively to develop creative solutions and practical paths forward to improve and strengthen the foundation of our representative democracy: our election system.

Explore the work of the Executive Session available below.

In the coming months, please check this space for papers on the role of states associations; workplace development; funding; and empowering voters to participate in local elections.

PAPERS & RESOURCES

The Necessary and Valuable Partnership: Law Enforcement and Election Officials
A photo of police car lights on top of a police car.

Paper

The Necessary and Valuable Partnership: Law Enforcement and Election Officials

This report by Christine Cole, Kim Wyman, and Tina Barton examines the complicated historical relationship between voting and law enforcement in the United States, highlighting how policing experiences can influence public attitudes towards the presence of law enforcement at voting locations.

Who’s in Charge of Congressional Elections?
U.S. Capitol Building.

Additional Resource

Who’s in Charge of Congressional Elections?

This resource provides accessible, reliable information on constitutional history and the roles and responsibilities involved in administering congressional elections in the United States, with the goal of advancing civic understanding among government officials, media, civic organizations, and the American public.

Building Capacity to Use Social Media: How Election Officials Can Leverage Content Creation to Provide Accurate Voter Information
A content creator with a microphone.

Paper

Building Capacity to Use Social Media: How Election Officials Can Leverage Content Creation to Provide Accurate Voter Information

This paper examines the growing role of content creators as information sources in modern society, proposing frameworks for effective collaboration between creators and election officials and offering recommendations for election officials to develop their own social media content.