Wednesday, November 14, 2018

(Download) Race and Redistricting: The Shaw-Cromartie Cases (Landmark Law Cases and American Society) pdf by Tinsley E. Yarbrough


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Through much of the 1990s, a newly hatched snake wreaked political havoc in the South.

When North Carolina gained a seat in Congress following the 1990 census, it sought to rectify a long-standing failure to represent African American voters by creating, under federal pressure, two "majority-minority" voting districts. One of these snaked along Interstate 85 for nearly two hundred miles—not much wider than the road itself in some places—and was ridiculed by many as one of the least compact legislative districts ever proposed.

From 1993 to 2001, three intertwined cases went before the Supreme Court that decided how far a state could go in establishing voting districts along racial lines. Noted Supreme Court biographer Tinsley Yarbrough examines these closely linked landmark cases to show how the Court addressed the constitutionality of redistricting within the volatile contexts of civil rights and partisan politics.

A suit was first filed by Duke University law professor Robinson Everett, a liberal who loathed discrimination but considered racially motivated redistricting a clear violation of the Fourteenth.
Tinsley E. Yarbrough ebooks downloads
Race and Redistricting: The Shaw-Cromartie Cases (Landmark Law Cases and American Society) read online
Race and Redistricting: The Shaw-Cromartie Cases (Landmark Law Cases and American Society) download

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