The United States suffers the conthiued costs of mahitainhig a racial hierarchy. Enhanced diversity and growhig realization of the economic costs of that hierarchy could lead to democratic pressure for reform. Yet, in the U.S., elites on the radical right seek to entrench themselves in power through the constriction of voting power and the strategic use of the racial hierarchy as a political tool. This Article traces the anti-democratic efforts of the radical right to limit the political power of the nation\u27s enhanced diversity, and to utilize archaic governance measures to entrench themselves politically, regardless of the costs of allowing the racial hierarchy to continue to fester. Antidemocratic efforts to limit voting power to assur...
Over the past generation, radical-democratic ideas have reemerged as an important intellectual and p...
Congress will soon review key provisions of the Voting Rights Act (VRA). A perennial concern has bee...
Equal political voice and democratically responsive government are widely cherished American ideals—...
In the end, democratic theory rests upon notions of market efficiency. Elections, like markets, invo...
American democracy is in trouble. Since the 2016 election, a sizable literature has developed that f...
American democracy is under siege. This is so because of the confluence of three trends: (1) demogra...
In the United States, the ability to participate in our political system, andspecifically the power ...
There is a democracy deficit at the intersection of crime, race, and poverty. The causes and consequ...
This paper, prepared for a symposium on voting rights in the George Washington Law Review, is a call...
The quest for political equality has been a major theme of American history. Indeed, since 1789, the...
According to many social scientists, democratic institutions are subject to much discontent and dist...
Since its founding, the United States has counted democratic elections as a fundamental tenet of dem...
This Article examines issues of inequality in education, minority representation, and access to the ...
Part I of this essay begins one hundred years before the passage of the Act, with Reconstruction. I ...
This Article develops an alternative theoretical approach to the Supreme Court's controversial elect...
Over the past generation, radical-democratic ideas have reemerged as an important intellectual and p...
Congress will soon review key provisions of the Voting Rights Act (VRA). A perennial concern has bee...
Equal political voice and democratically responsive government are widely cherished American ideals—...
In the end, democratic theory rests upon notions of market efficiency. Elections, like markets, invo...
American democracy is in trouble. Since the 2016 election, a sizable literature has developed that f...
American democracy is under siege. This is so because of the confluence of three trends: (1) demogra...
In the United States, the ability to participate in our political system, andspecifically the power ...
There is a democracy deficit at the intersection of crime, race, and poverty. The causes and consequ...
This paper, prepared for a symposium on voting rights in the George Washington Law Review, is a call...
The quest for political equality has been a major theme of American history. Indeed, since 1789, the...
According to many social scientists, democratic institutions are subject to much discontent and dist...
Since its founding, the United States has counted democratic elections as a fundamental tenet of dem...
This Article examines issues of inequality in education, minority representation, and access to the ...
Part I of this essay begins one hundred years before the passage of the Act, with Reconstruction. I ...
This Article develops an alternative theoretical approach to the Supreme Court's controversial elect...
Over the past generation, radical-democratic ideas have reemerged as an important intellectual and p...
Congress will soon review key provisions of the Voting Rights Act (VRA). A perennial concern has bee...
Equal political voice and democratically responsive government are widely cherished American ideals—...