11th Workshop on Advances in Secure Electronic Voting

Voting

A Workshop Associated with Financial Crypto 2026
6 March 2026
St. Kitts Marriott Resort
St. Kitts

Overview

Secure voting schemes, particularly cryptographically end-to-end verifiable (E2E-V) schemes, have been extensively researched over the past twenty years. However, real-world vulnerabilities present in voting systems have heightened the scrutiny of electoral security. Further, voting schemes face challenges in achieving and maintaining properties like (E2E-)verifiability, coercion resistance, high usability, good user experience, and accountability within complex, adversarial environments. Addressing these challenges requires a deep understanding of modern cryptography, information security, and human factors. Moreover, investigating electronic voting is interdisciplinary, demanding knowledge of governmental roles, voter behaviour, physical components, procedural methods, and legal frameworks.

Program Chairs

Karola Marky Ruhr University Bochum, Germany
Constantin Catalin Dragan University of Surrey, UK

Program Committee

Roberto Araujo Universidade Federal do Pará (UFPA)
Josh Benaloh
Matthew Bernhard University of Michigan
Jurlind Budurushi Baden-Wuerttemberg Cooperative State University Karlsruhe
Jeremy Clark Concordia University
Alexander Ek Monash University
Aleksander Essex University of Wetstern Ontario
Tamara Finogina Polytechnic University of Catalonia
Kristian Gjøsteen Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Rolf Haenni Bern University of Applied Sciences
Thomas Haines Australian National University
Oksana Kulyk IT University of Copenhagen
Stephan Neumann SaarLB
Christina Frederikke Nissen IT University of Copenhagen
Olivier Pereira UCLouvain
Daniel Rausch University of Stuttgart
Peter Roenne University of Luxembourg
Peter Y. A. Ryan University of Luxembourg
Carsten Schuermann IT University of Copenhagen
Vanessa Teague Thinking Cybersecurity
Jan Willemson Cybernetica