Ever since the Supreme Court instituted the one person, one vote principle in congressional elections based on its decision in Wesberry v. Sanders (1964), intrastate deviations from equal district populations have become smaller and smaller after each decennial reapportionment. Relying on equal total population as the standard to meet the Court's principle, though, has raised some constitutional and practical questions stemming from, most basically, not every person has the right to vote. Specifically, there is considerable deviation between the current redistricting practices and a literal interpretation of this constitutional principle. This study systematically analyzes the differences between districts' total populations and their votin...
The opinions leading up to and comprising the Redistricting Revolution, of the 1960s represent the ...
Since Baker v. Carr, when the Supreme Court overruled a long line of earlier decisions and conclude...
This presentation aims to address the subject of voter participation, particularly how it responds t...
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...
Ever since the United States Supreme Court entered the political thicket of redistricting and reap...
Beginning in the 1960s and 1970s, the Supreme Court began to establish and enforce a constitutional ...
In the 1960s, the Supreme Court famously imposed the one-person, one-vote requirement on federal, st...
With the dawning of the reapportionment revolution in the 1960s, the nature of redistricting changed...
The panelists discussed the Evenwel V. Abbott case and provided a legal background for the “One Pers...
After each census, state legislatures must redraw voting districts for state and local elections. Ea...
This Article argues that weighted voting should be used to comply with the constitutional one-person...
When the Supreme Court first entered the political thicket with the "one person, one vote" cases of ...
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, promis...
This article challenges the theoretical foundations of the right to cast an equally weighted vote. T...
The opinions leading up to and comprising the Redistricting Revolution, of the 1960s represent the ...
Since Baker v. Carr, when the Supreme Court overruled a long line of earlier decisions and conclude...
This presentation aims to address the subject of voter participation, particularly how it responds t...
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...
Ever since the United States Supreme Court entered the political thicket of redistricting and reap...
Beginning in the 1960s and 1970s, the Supreme Court began to establish and enforce a constitutional ...
In the 1960s, the Supreme Court famously imposed the one-person, one-vote requirement on federal, st...
With the dawning of the reapportionment revolution in the 1960s, the nature of redistricting changed...
The panelists discussed the Evenwel V. Abbott case and provided a legal background for the “One Pers...
After each census, state legislatures must redraw voting districts for state and local elections. Ea...
This Article argues that weighted voting should be used to comply with the constitutional one-person...
When the Supreme Court first entered the political thicket with the "one person, one vote" cases of ...
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, promis...
This article challenges the theoretical foundations of the right to cast an equally weighted vote. T...
The opinions leading up to and comprising the Redistricting Revolution, of the 1960s represent the ...
Since Baker v. Carr, when the Supreme Court overruled a long line of earlier decisions and conclude...
This presentation aims to address the subject of voter participation, particularly how it responds t...