What constraints should the protection of political equality place on the design of electoral systems? With the exception of requiring approximate population equality across a jurisdiction’s districts, the U.S. voting rights regime accepts substantial disproportionality in voting strength. This Article addresses the current Supreme Court’s abandonment of the Second Reconstruction’s “one person, one vote” standard with regard to both racial and partisan gerrymandering, and assesses the role that Congress and political science have played in this transition. This Article argues that an unabridged voting rights regime must recognize a standard of proportional representation derived from the protection of individual political equality
For the first time in at least a generation, the central focus of voting rights law has returned to ...
Debates on the proportionality of political representation surfaced repeatedly, and in similar forms...
An emerging consensus among election law scholars urges courts to break out of “the stagnant discour...
The quest for political equality has been a major theme of American history. Indeed, since 1789, the...
Challenges under the Equal Protection Clause require proof of intentional discrimination. Though ra...
The problem with creating and enforcing redistricting standards arises poignantly in racial gerryman...
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed to ensure that all Americans would be able to participate i...
The article challenges the U.S. to reevaluate the fundamental right to vote against racial targeting...
This Article presents a defense to the challenge that social choice theory presents to voting rights...
Finding an electoral system both equitable and efficient represents a desideratum for every electora...
This Article presents a defense to the challenge that social choice theory presents to voting rights...
This Article presents a defense to the challenge that social choice theory presents to voting rights...
Part I of this article examines Parity\u27s strangeness to United States observers. United States se...
In democratic theory, the ballot is the most perfect expression of the democratic commitment to the ...
Debates on the proportionality of political representation surfaced repeatedly, and in similar forms...
For the first time in at least a generation, the central focus of voting rights law has returned to ...
Debates on the proportionality of political representation surfaced repeatedly, and in similar forms...
An emerging consensus among election law scholars urges courts to break out of “the stagnant discour...
The quest for political equality has been a major theme of American history. Indeed, since 1789, the...
Challenges under the Equal Protection Clause require proof of intentional discrimination. Though ra...
The problem with creating and enforcing redistricting standards arises poignantly in racial gerryman...
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed to ensure that all Americans would be able to participate i...
The article challenges the U.S. to reevaluate the fundamental right to vote against racial targeting...
This Article presents a defense to the challenge that social choice theory presents to voting rights...
Finding an electoral system both equitable and efficient represents a desideratum for every electora...
This Article presents a defense to the challenge that social choice theory presents to voting rights...
This Article presents a defense to the challenge that social choice theory presents to voting rights...
Part I of this article examines Parity\u27s strangeness to United States observers. United States se...
In democratic theory, the ballot is the most perfect expression of the democratic commitment to the ...
Debates on the proportionality of political representation surfaced repeatedly, and in similar forms...
For the first time in at least a generation, the central focus of voting rights law has returned to ...
Debates on the proportionality of political representation surfaced repeatedly, and in similar forms...
An emerging consensus among election law scholars urges courts to break out of “the stagnant discour...