1st Edition

The Politics of Reapportionment

By Malcolm Jewell Copyright 2011
    356 Pages
    by Routledge

    353 Pages
    by Routledge

    The issue of apportionment is one of the most important problems facing citizens of most of the states in America. It underlies many other problems of state government. Growing judicial concern with apportionment is evidence of a failure of the political process in many states. A political solution to the problem requires better understanding and more accurate information about apportionment, which may be found in The Politics of Reapportionment.Understanding the politics of apportionment may be broken down into four parts: What are the political factors that have caused the various states to follow differing courses in apportionment? What are the political consequences of these differences in apportionment? When a legislature is grappling with any reapportionment problem, what roles are played by the various political groups involved? What are the consequences of transferring this controversy out of the legislative arena?Jewell notes that a study of legislative apportionment is essential to an understanding of any representative system of government. In the U.S. the patterns of apportionment have vitally affected the nature of our state and national political institutions, and our political history has been marked by a number of colorful struggles over this issue. For these reasons, American political scientists have devoted more attention to apportionment than to many other problems of government.

    INTRODUCTION TO THE TRANSACTION EDITION, FOREWORD, PART ONE: POLITICAL PATTERNS IN APPORTIONMENT, PART TWO: RURAL CONTROL OF THE LEGISLATURE THROUGH APPORTIONMENT, 1. The California Senate: Sectional Conflict and Vox Populi, 2. Colorado: A Matter of Balance, 3. Florida: Politics and the Pork Choppers, 4. North Carolina: People or Pine Trees, 5. Kentucky: A Latent Issue, 6. Texas: Factions in a One-Party Setting, PART THREE: CONGRESSIONAL REAPPORTIONMENT AND PARTISAN DEADLOCK, 7. Equilibrium in Illinois: Frustration and Accommodation of the Parties, 8. Pennsylvania: The Limits of Power in a Divided Government, 9. Apportionment and Districting in Ohio: Components of Deadlock, PART FOUR: CONGRESSIONAL REAPPORTIONMENT UNDER ONE-PARTY CONTROL, 10. North Carolina: This Bill or Nothing, 11. West Virginia: Tradition and Partisan Advantage, 12. Maryland: Frustration of One-Party Control, PART FIVE: REAPPORTIONMENT AS A MEANS OF POLITICAL CONTROL, 13. New York: Constitutionally Republican, 14. California: Brutal Butchery of the Two-Party System?, PART SIX: BYPASSING THE LEGISLATURE, AN URBAN OPPORTUNITY, 15. Michigan Legislative Apportionment: Key to Constitutional Change, 16. Maryland: Judicial Challenge to Rural Control, 17. Tennessee: Inertia and the Courts, BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTE, INDEX

    Biography

    Malcolm Jewell