^ 1.01.11.21.31.41.5Brett, Judith. From Secret Ballot to Democracy Sausage: How Australia Got Compulsory Voting. Text Publishing. 2019: 111 [30 May 2020]. ISBN 978-1-925626-81-0. (原始内容存档于2021-08-22) (英语). Australia is one of only a handful of countries to hold elections on Saturdays. Cyprus, Malta, Iceland, Latvia, Slovakia, Taiwan, and New Zealand are the others. ... Most countries go to the polls on Sundays, except in the Protestant-dominated Anglosphere, where public activities on the Sabbath other than attending church have historically been severely restricted.Brett, Judith (2019). From Secret Ballot to Democracy Sausage: How Australia Got Compulsory Voting (页面存档备份,存于互联网档案馆). Text Publishing. p. 111. ISBN978-1-925626-81-0. Retrieved 30 May 2020. Australia is one of only a handful of countries to hold elections on Saturdays. Cyprus, Malta, Iceland, Latvia, Slovakia, Taiwan, and New Zealand are the others. ... Most countries go to the polls on Sundays, except in the Protestant-dominated Anglosphere, where public activities on the Sabbath other than attending church have historically been severely restricted.
^Report of the 2014 National Lawyers Guild Bolivian Election Observation Delegation(PDF) (报告). National Lawyers Guild: 7. 20 January 2015 [30 May 2020]. (原始内容(PDF)存档于2021-03-11). In most respects, Election Day appeared to be a model of local democracy in action, with notable differences from the US voting process. Elections are held on Sundays that are declared national holidays. All regular business is shut down to encourage voter turnout. Voting is compulsory--with non-excused abstention punishable by a hefty fine--as well as highly participatory. To encourage unbiased reflection, campaigning is prohibited for 72 hours ahead of the election, and the consumption of alcoholic beverages is outlawed for 48 hours.
^Schakel 2017,第42頁: "General elections for the state, entity and cantonal parliaments take place on the same date every four years. ... Elections are held on Sundays and election silence kicks in one day prior to the start of voting and lasts until the polling stations close. Bosnia and Herzegovina citizens residing abroad keep their full voting rights but rarely exercise it."
^Hrebenar, Ronald J. Japan's New Party System. Westview Press. 2000: 57. ISBN 978-0813330570. The decisions regarding which days will be election days and how the voters will indicate their candidate preferences are uniquely Japanese. Election days call on Sundays in Japan. Because Sunday is a holiday, primary and junior high schools can be used as voting sites; moreover, it is assumed that more citizens will be able to vote on a Sunday. But the choice of which Sunday is usually left up to the politicians.
^Lazo, Ricardo S. Philippine governance and the 1987 constitution 2009 2nd. Manila, Philippines: Published & distributed by Rex Book Store. 2009: 161. ISBN 9789712345463.