The panelists discussed the Evenwel V. Abbott case and provided a legal background for the “One Person-One Vote” principle. The issue at hand is whether the Equal Protection Clause requires states to equalize the number of eligible voters in legislative districts. Or may states draw districts to contain equal numbers of people regardless of their eligibility to vote? A summary of the event is available here
Includes bibliographical references (pages [91]-99)Between 1962 and 1964 the Supreme Court of the Un...
Twenty-five years ago, in Avery v Midland County, the United States Supreme Court extended the one p...
“One person one vote” is one of the most appealing political slogans of all time, capturing egalitar...
Abstract: Ever since the Supreme Court instituted the one person, one vote principle in congressiona...
Ever since the Supreme Court instituted the one person, one vote principle in congressional election...
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, promis...
I show that it is always possible to draw legislative districts that would be close in both total po...
Since Baker v. Carr, when the Supreme Court overruled a long line of earlier decisions and conclude...
Ever since the Supreme Court instituted the one person, one vote principle in congressional election...
In Evenwel v Abbott the Supreme Court left open the question of whether states could employ populati...
Ever since the United States Supreme Court entered the political thicket of redistricting and reap...
From an exclusionary beginning, American democracy has, to its great credit, accomplished the progre...
It has now been four decades since the Supreme Court stepped into the political thicket with its gro...
Beginning in the 1960s and 1970s, the Supreme Court began to establish and enforce a constitutional ...
This Article argues that weighted voting should be used to comply with the constitutional one-person...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [91]-99)Between 1962 and 1964 the Supreme Court of the Un...
Twenty-five years ago, in Avery v Midland County, the United States Supreme Court extended the one p...
“One person one vote” is one of the most appealing political slogans of all time, capturing egalitar...
Abstract: Ever since the Supreme Court instituted the one person, one vote principle in congressiona...
Ever since the Supreme Court instituted the one person, one vote principle in congressional election...
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, promis...
I show that it is always possible to draw legislative districts that would be close in both total po...
Since Baker v. Carr, when the Supreme Court overruled a long line of earlier decisions and conclude...
Ever since the Supreme Court instituted the one person, one vote principle in congressional election...
In Evenwel v Abbott the Supreme Court left open the question of whether states could employ populati...
Ever since the United States Supreme Court entered the political thicket of redistricting and reap...
From an exclusionary beginning, American democracy has, to its great credit, accomplished the progre...
It has now been four decades since the Supreme Court stepped into the political thicket with its gro...
Beginning in the 1960s and 1970s, the Supreme Court began to establish and enforce a constitutional ...
This Article argues that weighted voting should be used to comply with the constitutional one-person...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [91]-99)Between 1962 and 1964 the Supreme Court of the Un...
Twenty-five years ago, in Avery v Midland County, the United States Supreme Court extended the one p...
“One person one vote” is one of the most appealing political slogans of all time, capturing egalitar...