External Sources Manager / Friday, August 5, 2016 / Categories: Russia, Territory of elections, Russia, Machine-readable libraries Sergey Shpilkin's dataset archive Election investigator and physicist Sergei Shpilkin has published an array of Russian election data at http://datahub.io/ . His data can be found at: https://datahub.io/organization/ru_elections The data set includes Russian presidential elections, 2012 . Russian State Duma Elections, 2011 Russian Presidential Elections, 2008 Elections to the State Duma of the Russian Federation, 2007 Presidential elections in the Russian Federation, 2004 Elections to the State Duma of the Russian Federation, 2003 Presidential elections in the Russian Federation, 2000 Russian State Duma elections, 1999 (about 40 per cent of PECs) Data format: ODS Latest update: 09.08.2016 Previous Article Armenia Referendum 2015 Next Article Russia, State Duma 2016 Print 19266 Theoretic depthObservation Please login or register to post comments.
Kemerovo Oblast — Kuzbass Kemerovo Oblast — Kuzbass Gubernatorial election, 2023 EG / Wednesday, October 11, 2023 0 860 Read more
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Additions to our Lab: Special tools! Additions to our Lab: Special tools! EG / Tuesday, October 10, 2023 0 6003 We are launching a new section in our Lab: Special tools. Each tool in the lab can be made for an individual election or a group of elections. The first such instrument we place The integrated statistical data analyzer specifically made for the 2023 Unified Election Day. Read more
DIY Kiesling-Shpilkin diagram DIY Kiesling-Shpilkin diagram The presentation of a new interactive tool EG / Monday, September 25, 2023 0 20652 Good news for electoral observers, journalists and election investigators. You have a new and long-awaited tool - the interactive Kiesling-Shpilkin diagram. This detailed video lesson will help you understand how to work with this kit, what the advantages of an integrated approach are, how the tools help each other to detect an anomaly, or how the findings of one tool confirm the findings of another. In the lecture, we detected falsifications in the Moscow region. Read more