This Article examines what law can do to enable an electorate comprised of mostly ignorant voters to obtain meaningful representation and to hold elected officials accountable for the government\u27s performance. Drawing on a half-century of research by political scientists, we argue that political parties are both the key to good elections and a common cause of electoral dysfunction. Party labels can help rational, low-information voters by providing them with credible, low cost, and easily understood signals of candidates\u27 ideology and policy preferences. But in federal systems, any number of forces may result in party cues that are poorly calibrated to the electorate and issue space of subnational governments. Further, the geographic ...
American voters are shockingly ignorant about politics. Not only do they not know basic facts about ...
In light of recent political events, prominent scholars have argued that voters ignorant of the issu...
This dissertation confronts several important questions about the institutional regulation of electi...
This Article examines what law can do to enable an electorate comprised of mostly ignorant voters to...
Election law struggles with the question of neutrality, not only with its possibility — can election...
This Article proceeds as follows. Part I begins by offering a brief history and background of judici...
In this three-paper dissertation, I examine how people react when democratic institutions function s...
In this three-paper dissertation, I examine how people react when democratic institutions function s...
In the end, democratic theory rests upon notions of market efficiency. Elections, like markets, invo...
In an effort to determine voter eligibility and access to the voting booth, our democratic system ha...
In both law and public scrutiny, renewed attention is being given to the simple act of casting a bal...
In an effort to determine voter eligibility and access to the voting booth, our democratic system ha...
In an effort to determine voter eligibility and access to the voting booth, our democratic system ha...
In the United States, there is wide variation from state to state in the institutional arrangements ...
In the United States, there is wide variation from state to state in the institutional arrangements ...
American voters are shockingly ignorant about politics. Not only do they not know basic facts about ...
In light of recent political events, prominent scholars have argued that voters ignorant of the issu...
This dissertation confronts several important questions about the institutional regulation of electi...
This Article examines what law can do to enable an electorate comprised of mostly ignorant voters to...
Election law struggles with the question of neutrality, not only with its possibility — can election...
This Article proceeds as follows. Part I begins by offering a brief history and background of judici...
In this three-paper dissertation, I examine how people react when democratic institutions function s...
In this three-paper dissertation, I examine how people react when democratic institutions function s...
In the end, democratic theory rests upon notions of market efficiency. Elections, like markets, invo...
In an effort to determine voter eligibility and access to the voting booth, our democratic system ha...
In both law and public scrutiny, renewed attention is being given to the simple act of casting a bal...
In an effort to determine voter eligibility and access to the voting booth, our democratic system ha...
In an effort to determine voter eligibility and access to the voting booth, our democratic system ha...
In the United States, there is wide variation from state to state in the institutional arrangements ...
In the United States, there is wide variation from state to state in the institutional arrangements ...
American voters are shockingly ignorant about politics. Not only do they not know basic facts about ...
In light of recent political events, prominent scholars have argued that voters ignorant of the issu...
This dissertation confronts several important questions about the institutional regulation of electi...