How Do Elections Work Really? Here's Everything You Need to Know

How Do Elections Work Really? Here's Everything You Need to Know

Over the course of roughly 100 articles, The Conversation's scholars have explained how the U.S. election system works, retold the history of how it got that way and examined what effects and significance those mechanisms have for the nation today.

Editors’ note: In a world transformed by a pandemic, few of the fundamentals in Americans’ lives – schools, jobs, even how to shop for groceries – have remained the same. The same is true with the election, where the most basic of the institution’s elements – how, where and when to vote, among them – have changed.

When The Conversation US’s politics editors met to figure out how to provide readers with coverage that would be useful and informative, the approach was clear: a civics lesson. Over the course of roughly 100 articles, our scholars have explained how the U.S. election system works, retold the history of how it got that way and examined what effects and significance those mechanisms have for the nation today.

Here, our team has collected all of these articles, divided thematically, from the very beginning of campaigning through what happens after Election Day itself.

Campaigning

Basic elements of political campaigning

Campaigning in a pandemic

Campaign tactics

Political conventions

Money in politics

Candidates’ debates

Media and public perception

Polling

Vice presidential and Cabinet picks

International perspectives

 

The process of voting

History of voting

Voter suppression

Many voters face obstacles

Specific voting groups and blocs

How to vote

Voting in person

Voting by mail

Staff of the House of Representatives review Illinois’ Electoral College vote report in January 2017. Samuel Corum/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Aftermath

Electoral College

Election integrity

Potential for violence

Who decides the outcome?

How it all ends

The Conversation

Catesby Holmes, International Editor | Politics Editor, The Conversation; Jeff Inglis, Politics + Society Editor, The Conversation, and Naomi Schalit, Senior Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Image: Reuters