This Issue Brief details the scope of voting rights under state constitutions, an overlooked source of the right to vote. Part I considers both the lack of a federal constitutional right to vote and the explicit right mentioned in virtually all state constitutions. Part II describes recent state-level voter ID cases, providing a summary of how courts facing litigation over voter ID laws have employed their state constitutions. Part III contends that state courts, instead of simply following narrow federal jurisprudence in “lockstep,” should give broader, independent force to their explicit state constitutional provisions conferring the right to vote. Part IV highlights how different state judges construe their state constitutions, either br...
Should the United States Constitution be amended to guarantee the right to vote? To the average citi...
In recent years, courts and commentators have focused on the federalism-based limits on the power of...
Both the U.S. Constitution and The Federalist Papers suggest that voters ought to have more freedom ...
This Issue Brief details the scope of voting rights under state constitutions, an overlooked source ...
This Article provides the first comprehensive look at state constitutional provisions explicitly gra...
This midterm cycle has been characterized by fierce debates over voter identification measures in so...
State courts are paramount in defining the constitutional right to vote. This primacy of state court...
The Voter Qualifications Clause of Article I, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution makes federal votin...
This Article poses a question at the core of our democracy: Is the constitutional right to vote a fu...
In response to Joshua A. Douglas, State Judges and the Right to Vote, 77 Ohio St. L.J. 1 (2016)
If the United States Supreme Court conceived of the right to vote as an active entitlement that safe...
Challengers to voter ID laws should more often look to Montana’s constitutional right-to-vote clause...
A complete analysis of the right to vote requires at least three levels of inquiry: the U.S. Constit...
The Constitution doesn\u27t guarantee Americans the right to vote. That always comes as a surprise t...
Federal action has been undertaken throughout our nation’s history to both quell voter suppression a...
Should the United States Constitution be amended to guarantee the right to vote? To the average citi...
In recent years, courts and commentators have focused on the federalism-based limits on the power of...
Both the U.S. Constitution and The Federalist Papers suggest that voters ought to have more freedom ...
This Issue Brief details the scope of voting rights under state constitutions, an overlooked source ...
This Article provides the first comprehensive look at state constitutional provisions explicitly gra...
This midterm cycle has been characterized by fierce debates over voter identification measures in so...
State courts are paramount in defining the constitutional right to vote. This primacy of state court...
The Voter Qualifications Clause of Article I, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution makes federal votin...
This Article poses a question at the core of our democracy: Is the constitutional right to vote a fu...
In response to Joshua A. Douglas, State Judges and the Right to Vote, 77 Ohio St. L.J. 1 (2016)
If the United States Supreme Court conceived of the right to vote as an active entitlement that safe...
Challengers to voter ID laws should more often look to Montana’s constitutional right-to-vote clause...
A complete analysis of the right to vote requires at least three levels of inquiry: the U.S. Constit...
The Constitution doesn\u27t guarantee Americans the right to vote. That always comes as a surprise t...
Federal action has been undertaken throughout our nation’s history to both quell voter suppression a...
Should the United States Constitution be amended to guarantee the right to vote? To the average citi...
In recent years, courts and commentators have focused on the federalism-based limits on the power of...
Both the U.S. Constitution and The Federalist Papers suggest that voters ought to have more freedom ...