Courts and scholars have operated on the implicit assumption that the Supreme Court’s “one person, one vote” jurisprudence put redistricting politics on a fixed, ten-year cycle. Recent redistricting controversies in Colorado, Texas, and elsewhere, however, have undermined this assumption, highlighting the fact that most states are currently free to redraw election districts as often as they like. This essay explores whether partisan fairness—a normative commitment that both scholars and the Supreme Court have identified as a central concern of districting arrangements— would be promoted by a procedural rule limiting the frequency of redistricting. While the literature has not considered this question, scholars generally are pessimistic abou...
The Supreme Court recognizes that [p]artisangerrymanders... [are incompatible] with democraticprinc...
With the dawning of the reapportionment revolution in the 1960s, the nature of redistricting changed...
The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent Rucho v. Common Cause decision has closed the federal court door to ...
Courts and scholars have operated on the implicit assumption that the Supreme Court’s “one person, o...
Courts and scholars have operated on the implicit assumption that the Supreme Court\u27s one person...
Academic studies of redistricting tend to be either doctrinal or empirical, but not both. As a resul...
For over twenty years, the political gerrymandering claim under the Equal Protection Clause of the F...
In 2004, Supreme Court Justice David Souter expressed the opinion that “the increasing efficiency of...
Partisan redistricting disputes are relatively rare occurrences. This paper explores the factors tha...
Redistricting cases have long had a prominent place on the Supreme Court’s docket. This past session...
In recent years, the judiciary’s inability to hold state legislatures accountable for partisan gerry...
Twice in the last two decades, the Supreme Court has come within two votes of declaring partisan ger...
Partisan redistricting effectively distorts election outcomes across the country and must be resolve...
Partisan gerrymandering is frequently condemned for distorting democracy and causing unfair represen...
A recent outpouring of public and academic criticism of gerrymandering raises difficult questions ab...
The Supreme Court recognizes that [p]artisangerrymanders... [are incompatible] with democraticprinc...
With the dawning of the reapportionment revolution in the 1960s, the nature of redistricting changed...
The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent Rucho v. Common Cause decision has closed the federal court door to ...
Courts and scholars have operated on the implicit assumption that the Supreme Court’s “one person, o...
Courts and scholars have operated on the implicit assumption that the Supreme Court\u27s one person...
Academic studies of redistricting tend to be either doctrinal or empirical, but not both. As a resul...
For over twenty years, the political gerrymandering claim under the Equal Protection Clause of the F...
In 2004, Supreme Court Justice David Souter expressed the opinion that “the increasing efficiency of...
Partisan redistricting disputes are relatively rare occurrences. This paper explores the factors tha...
Redistricting cases have long had a prominent place on the Supreme Court’s docket. This past session...
In recent years, the judiciary’s inability to hold state legislatures accountable for partisan gerry...
Twice in the last two decades, the Supreme Court has come within two votes of declaring partisan ger...
Partisan redistricting effectively distorts election outcomes across the country and must be resolve...
Partisan gerrymandering is frequently condemned for distorting democracy and causing unfair represen...
A recent outpouring of public and academic criticism of gerrymandering raises difficult questions ab...
The Supreme Court recognizes that [p]artisangerrymanders... [are incompatible] with democraticprinc...
With the dawning of the reapportionment revolution in the 1960s, the nature of redistricting changed...
The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent Rucho v. Common Cause decision has closed the federal court door to ...