Given the popular knowledge that with greater education comes the likelihood of higher voting participation rates among Americans, it is puzzling that African Americans have not been subject to a rise in voting participation that is equivalent to the increase in the rate of education attainment over the last four decades. This study is dedicated to explaining why education is a weak predictive factor for voting participation among African American voters. It ventures to suggest and support that communal factors tied to group membership exert a strong force on whether or not African American citizens vote
This chapter traces the evolution of African American electoral participation and characterizes the ...
The right to vote is arguably one of the most important and fundamental values in American democracy...
Numerous studies show that the rate at which African‐Americans cast ballots with missing or invalid ...
The United States is a representative democracy, meaning that citizens vote to elect officials who r...
The United States is a representative democracy, meaning that citizens vote to elect officials who r...
The democratic practice of representative government in the United States is supposed to represent a...
Many of the studies about minority voting are from the 1990s, and they effectively say neither repre...
The 1982 amendments to the Voting Rights Act targeted electoral structures as significant determinan...
A rich body of research presents conflicting accounts describing how contemporary voter suppression ...
The 1982 amendments to the Voting Rights Act targeted electoral structures as significant determinan...
Why have issues which disproportionately affect African Americans not been brought to the policy for...
Research on electoral structure has often touted single member districts to be beneficial for achiev...
This article focuses on the views and attitudes of African American State Legislators towards altern...
A historic increase in African American voter turnout in the 2008 presidential elections has also co...
This chapter traces the evolution of African American electoral participation and characterizes the ...
This chapter traces the evolution of African American electoral participation and characterizes the ...
The right to vote is arguably one of the most important and fundamental values in American democracy...
Numerous studies show that the rate at which African‐Americans cast ballots with missing or invalid ...
The United States is a representative democracy, meaning that citizens vote to elect officials who r...
The United States is a representative democracy, meaning that citizens vote to elect officials who r...
The democratic practice of representative government in the United States is supposed to represent a...
Many of the studies about minority voting are from the 1990s, and they effectively say neither repre...
The 1982 amendments to the Voting Rights Act targeted electoral structures as significant determinan...
A rich body of research presents conflicting accounts describing how contemporary voter suppression ...
The 1982 amendments to the Voting Rights Act targeted electoral structures as significant determinan...
Why have issues which disproportionately affect African Americans not been brought to the policy for...
Research on electoral structure has often touted single member districts to be beneficial for achiev...
This article focuses on the views and attitudes of African American State Legislators towards altern...
A historic increase in African American voter turnout in the 2008 presidential elections has also co...
This chapter traces the evolution of African American electoral participation and characterizes the ...
This chapter traces the evolution of African American electoral participation and characterizes the ...
The right to vote is arguably one of the most important and fundamental values in American democracy...
Numerous studies show that the rate at which African‐Americans cast ballots with missing or invalid ...