I certainly would agree.
The reason I point that out is that if the security isn't there and so on, it might be an alternative to Internet or online voting because it sort of solves the same problems that it would seek to solve.
You wrote a paper called “Internet Voting: The Canadian Municipal Experience”. You state in that paper, when talking about the city of Peterborough, “turnout may have been artificially high in the 2003 election given that there was a referendum question on the ballot.”
Given your research on voter turnout, do you typically see higher voter turnout in referendums as compared to other electoral votes? Why do you think that would be?