"Born from bloodshed in March 1965, when six hundred black protestors marching for the right to vote in Selma, Alabama, were set upon by state troopers wielding clubs and tear gas, the Voting Rights Act was, as President Lyndon B. Johnson declared at the time, "a triumph for freedom as huge as any victory that has ever been won on any battlefield." Unfortunately, in the four decades since its passage, amendments and legal developments have made this once simple law muddled and contradictory, far removed from its original purpose of ending voting barriers for millions of African Americans. In The Unintended Consequences of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, Edward Blum draws on public records, press accounts, and extensive personal interviews with state and local officials and others involved in politics at the grassroots level to highlight the real-world consequences of Section 5. Anecdotal accounts of the difficulties local governments in four jurisdictions have encountered in implementing the act reveal the transformation of the act from a law designed to protect individuals' right to vote to a gerrymandering tool used to further the electoral prospects of incumbent politicians of all races. Blum concludes that Section 5, as it has been implemented, has become not only silly and expensive, but pernicious as well. Why did Congress renew Section 5 in 2006, and why did President George W. Bush enthusiastically sign it into law? Blum offers an unsettling perspective on Lyndon Johnson's proudest legislative achievement, describing its degeneration into an unworkable, unfair, and arguably unconstitutional mandate which is bad for the body politic and race relations in America." -- back cover.
Freedom of Expression and Freedom of Religion Arthur D. Hellman, William D. Araiza, Thomas E. Baker ... Douglas, Burton, Clark, Harlan, Brennan, Whittaker Warren, Black, Frankfurter, Douglas, Clark, Harlan, Brennan, Whittaker, ...
Summarizes important legal cases dealing with the Constitution, judicial power, war powers, federalism, taxes, state economic regulation, due process, and executive power
A Reference Guide Donald E. Lively. stitution's meaning . ... The president's disappointment in Warren was not entirely warranted and was certainly not a basis for claimed betrayal . Eisenhower had nominated Warren as chief justice less ...
[iv/v] ISBN: 978-1-5791-1164-9 (eBook) Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Andersen, Roger W. Skills & values—trusts and estates / Roger W. Andersen, Karen E. Boxx. p. cm. ISBN 978-1-4224-2698-2 (softbound) 1.
Collected Courses of the Academy of European Law
John E. Nowak, Ronald D. Rotunda. does not mean that the “ reasonable person ” standard is not met . The Second Element of the Miller Test . With respect to the second part of the Miller test , the Court offered " a few plain examples ...
Hopkins, W. Wat. "Negligence 10 Years After Gem." Journalism Monograph 93 (1985). — . ... New York: World Almanac Publications, 1984. TM. "Times v. Sullivan: The Music Still Plays Sweetly." Quill (March 1989): 7. Simon, Todd F.
Mark A. Graber, Howard Gillman ... 2 In an introduction to a work subtitled Lessons from the Confederate Constitution that rarely refers to slaves or slavery, Marshall L. DeRosa declares, “the model of government embodied in the CSA ...
From 1992 to 1998 violent crime began an impressive decline nationally, and the violent crime rate in the states that did not adopt “shall issue” laws fell twice as fast as in the “shall issue” states.123Even more telling, ...
Justice Ginsburg is the second woman to sit on the high court and the first Jewish justice to sit there since the retirement of Justice Arthur J. Goldberg in 1965. See U.S. Congress , Senate , Committee on the Judiciary , Hearings ...