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CONTENTS
1 Cover
5 1 What’s the Problem? The Need to Draw District Boundaries Fair Elections Representation Plan of the Book Conclusion Notes
6 2 A Brief History of Gerrymandering Districts in Early American History Redistricting in the Mid- to Late Nineteenth Century Redistricting in the Early to Mid-Twentieth Century Conclusion Notes
7 3 The Legal Status of Gerrymandering The Apportionment Cases Racial Gerrymandering Cases Partisan Gerrymandering Cases Conclusion Notes
8 4 How Gerrymandering Works Who is Responsible for Drawing the Maps? Redistricting Criteria How Redistricting is Done How to Gerrymander Districts Conclusion Notes
9 5 The Consequences of Gerrymandering The Effect on Candidates and Parties The Effect on Voters Polarization Conclusion Notes
10 6 Reform Proposals Bureaucratic Redistricting – The “Iowa Model” and Missouri’s (Short-Lived) State Demographer Independent Redistricting Commissions and Public Involvement Multimember Districts Conclusion Notes
12 Bibliography
13 Index
Guide
1 Cover
9 Index
List of Figures
1 Chapter 2Figure 2.1 The Original Gerrymander
2 Chapter 3Figure 3.1 Texas’ 30th Congressional District (1996)
3 Chapter 4Figure 4.1 Distribution of Voters in a Hypothetical StateFigure 4.2 Square Party GerrymanderFigure 4.3a Circle Party Gerrymander (Cracking)Figure 4.3b Circle Party Gerrymander (Packing)Figure 4.4 Non-Partisan Redistricting Commission
List of Tables
1 Chapter 1Table 1.1 Hypothetical Example of Good Dyadic (District-Level) Representation but Poor Col…Table 1.2 Hypothetical Example of Poor Dyadic (District-Level) Representation but Good Col…
2 Chapter 6Table 6.1 States using Redistricting Commissions
Pages
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