Page 30

CEP template 2012

D emo c r a c y a n d t h e r u l e o f l aw Commonwealth Governance Handbook 2014/15 28 Hellström, J. and Karefelt, A., 2012. Participation through Mobile Phones – A Study of SMS use during the Ugandan General Elections 2011 pdf ACE Electoral Knowledge Network. Available at: https://aceproject.org/electoral-advice/archive/questions/ replies/792801229/207425906/ICTD2012_Hellstrom_Karefelt.pdf Accessed 15 December 2014. Kailasam, R., 2010. M-Governance: Leveraging Mobile Technology to Extend the Reach of e-Governance webpage mGovWorld. Available at: www.mgovworld.org/libra/mgovernance/papers/mgovernance leveraging-mobile-technology-to-extend Accessed 15 November 2014. Oola, O., 2011. Uganda’s 2011 Election: Any Lessons for Local Peace Builders? webpage Insight on Conflict. Available at: www.insightonconflict.org/2011/03/uganda-2011-election-lessonfor local-peacebuilders/ Accessed 15 December 2014. Pande, R., 2011. Can Informed Voters Enforce Better Governance? Experiments in Low Income Democracies pdf Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Available at: www.hks.harvard.edu/fs/ rpande/papers/caninformedvotersenforcebettergovernance.pdf Accessed 15 December 2014. Petersen, C. E., 2006. Uganda: Presidential, Parliamentary and Local Council Elections 2006 pdf University of Oslo. Available at: www.jus.uio.no/smr/english/about/programmes/nordem/publicati ons/nordem-report/2006/0806.pdf Accessed 15 December 2014. Sin, K. N., Sulaiman, A. and Zolait, A. H. S., 2008. ‘Analysis of mobile users’ perception towards SMS voting’. Communications of the IBIMA, 1 (21), pp. 182–190. Vergne, C., 2009. Turnout in Developing Countries: The Effect of Mass Media on National Voter Participation webpage Centre for studies and international development. Available at: www. cerdi.org/production/show/id/1117 Accessed 15 December 2014. Young, D., 2005. A Close-Up of Voter Turnout: Survey Data from Africa document University of California at Los Angeles. Available at: www.sscnet.ucla.edu/polisci/wgape/papers/4_ Young.doc Accessed 15 December 2014. EMMANUEL EILU is a PhD student in information technology at the school of computing and IT at Makerere University. His area of research is in human–computer interaction (HCI), particularly mobile user experience and the use of mobile phones as voting tools in developing countries. He holds a master’s degree in information technology with a focus on e-government. Eilu has taught both post-graduate and undergraduate programmes at the school of computing and IT at Makerere University. His major teaching areas include HCI (usability and user experience), information systems security and data communication networks. REHEMA BAGUMA is a senior lecturer at the school of computing and IT at Makerere University. She is a researcher in human–computer interaction involved in developing appropriate ICT services for developing countries, particularly e-government, e-learning, e-health and making ICTs accessible for people with disabilities. Baguma has accrued extensive experience in teaching, research and consulting in the field of information systems – she holds a PhD in information systems from Radboud University in the Netherlands. JOHN SÖREN PETTERSSON is a professor in information systems at Karlstad University, where he is also a board member of the interdisciplinary research centre HumanIT. Pettersson is one of the founders of the biannual international conference series Mobile Communication for Development, M4D, run by HumanIT. He pursues research in usable privacy and is developing prototyping techniques for rapid interactive prototyping.


CEP template 2012
To see the actual publication please follow the link above