Date of Award:

8-2025

Document Type:

Thesis

Degree Name:

Master of Science (MS)

Department:

Political Science

Committee Chair(s)

Damon Cann

Committee

Damon Cann

Committee

Joshua Ryan

Committee

Lucas A. Rentschler

Abstract

The appeal of ranked choice voting has led to its recent meteoric rise throughout America, leading to adoption in a number of cities and a handful of states, but some critics and political scientists worry about its higher difficulty potentially leading to more errors and undesirable behavior. Utilizing an experiment, I find that a short voter education video is all that is required to reduce rates of errors and ideologically inconsistent behavior, while finding null results for undervoting, possibly due to its low occurrence in the sample.

As ranked choice voting’s adoption is considered in each election cycle for jurisdictions ranging from small towns in Utah to statewide adoptions nationwide, this research clarifies the nature of some of the potential drawbacks of the reform. This may alleviate some concern for jurisdictions who are considering ranked choice voting if those jurisdictions are willing to commit resources to voter education.

Checksum

f73e5a59a7c187e75bea2940157d682b

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

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