Introduction to Long Term Observation Unit
Learn the foundations of long-term election observation through ELOG’s practical approach to monitoring the pre-election, election-day, and post-election environment. This course introduces the role, values, responsibilities, reporting duties, and safety considerations of Long-Term Observers.
Course snapshot
This unit equips learners with the principles and practical understanding needed to serve as a credible, non-partisan, and security-conscious Long-Term Observer in an electoral process.
- Level: Introductory
- Format: Online, self-paced
- Audience: Observers, CSOs, students, democracy practitioners
- Focus: Observation, reporting, ethics, safety, and electoral integrity
About this course
Elections are not a one-day event. ELOG approaches elections as a process, and long-term observation is designed to monitor what happens before, during, and after voting. This course introduces that broader electoral cycle approach and explains why observation matters for transparency, public confidence, and accountability.
What you will learn
This unit gives learners a practical introduction to long-term election observation and field reporting.
Election observation foundations
Understand the meaning, purpose, objectives, and principles of election observation, including impartiality, non-interference, factual reporting, and respect for the law.
The electoral cycle approach
Learn how observation extends across the pre-election, election-day, and post-election periods rather than focusing only on voting day.
LTO roles and responsibilities
Explore what Long-Term Observers are expected to do, from attending briefings and verifying incidents to sending regular reports and escalating urgent issues.
Pre-election monitoring
Study the key thematic areas LTOs observe before an election, including EMB preparedness, party processes, campaigns, voter education, security, inclusion, hate speech, and violence.
Election-day external observation
Learn how to assess the environment outside polling stations, including voter access, security presence, queues, voter intimidation, campaign activity, and public order.
Post-election observation
Understand how to monitor result finalization, dispute resolution, government formation, institutional responses, and political and social stability after voting ends.
Who this course is for
This course is suited to learners who want a solid introduction to observation work and electoral integrity.
New observers
For people beginning their journey in election observation and monitoring.
Civil society actors
For governance, democracy, civic engagement, and accountability practitioners.
Students and researchers
For learners interested in democracy, elections, governance, human rights, and public policy.
Field practitioners
For coordinators and monitors who need a practical grounding in ethical and structured observation.
Course highlights
The course combines institutional context, ethical grounding, field guidance, and reporting discipline.
Grounded in ELOG practice
Built around ELOG’s role as a citizen-led domestic election observation coalition committed to credible, peaceful, free, and fair electoral processes.
Reporting discipline
Introduces checklist-based reporting, regular submission schedules, and the importance of immediate reporting when critical incidents arise.
Observer ethics
Covers the code of conduct, neutrality pledge, confidentiality, diligence, and restrictions on partisanship and media engagement.
Security awareness
Helps learners understand threats observers may face and the importance of personal safety, neutrality, and timely escalation.
Checklist-based learning
Shows how LTOs structure their observations around practical guiding questions and standardized reporting tools.
Professional conduct
Reinforces that observer credibility depends on objectivity, accuracy, non-intrusiveness, and respectful engagement with institutions and communities.
What makes this course important
Long-Term Observers help citizens, institutions, and stakeholders understand whether electoral processes are being conducted fairly, transparently, and according to the law. Their work helps identify risks early, document emerging issues, and strengthen confidence in democratic processes.
This course helps learners appreciate that credible election observation depends not only on presence in the field, but also on discipline, integrity, safety awareness, and systematic reporting.
Key values reinforced in this unit
- Impartiality and non-partisanship
- Accuracy and fact-based reporting
- Respect for national laws and EMB guidelines
- Professionalism and confidentiality
- Security consciousness and personal responsibility
Ready to begin the unit?
Continue to the ELOG VSE learning portal and start your training in long-term election observation.
Take the Course