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Quadratic Election Law

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2016
The standard form of electoral system in the United States—plurality voting with one person, one vote—suffers from countless defects, many of which stem from its failure to enable people to register the intensity of their preferences for political outcomes when they vote. Quadratic voting, an elegant alternative system proposed by Glen Weyl, provides a
Posner, Eric A.   +1 more
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Teaching Election Law

Election Law Journal: Rules, Politics, and Policy, 2014
Abstract In the last couple years, new editions of the two most prominent election law casebooks have been released, and one entirely new casebook has been published. This is an opportune moment, then, both to review the volumes and to assess the state of the field. Fortunately, both are strong.
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Election Law Federalism

Michigan Law Review, 2016
This Article provides the first comprehensive account of non-Voting Rights Act federal voting laws. Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act—long the most effective voting rights law in American history—was disabled by the Supreme Court in Shelby County v. Holder. Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act is in the crosshairs.
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Race and Election Law

2023
Abstract At the core of election law in the United States are contestations over the rights of African Americans to participate and be represented in the democratic process. Consistent with Derrick Bell’s interest-convergence thesis, the outcome of the Black struggle for full citizenship has depended, at particular moments in time, on
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Election Law and Constitutional Law

Abstract This chapter explores a long-standing debate over the relationship between election law and constitutional law. During its early years, scholars insisted on “electoral law exceptionalism”—the claim that election law was an independent field, separate and apart from constitutional law.
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Aligning Election Law

Abstract This book argues that alignment between governmental outputs and popular preferences should be a tenet of the law of democracy. Alignment is a core democratic value. Yet it isn’t appreciated by election law scholarship, much of which focuses on other democratic goals.
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