Lexington Books
Pages: 344
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7391-0718-8 • Hardback • August 2005 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
Peter Galderisi is Associate Professor of Political Science at Utah State University.
Part 1 Part I - Introduction: Reapportionment and Redistricting: History and Concepts
Chapter 2 Introduction: Redistricting Past, Present, and Future
Chapter 3 On the Systemic Consequences of Redistricting in the 1960s
Chapter 4 Redistricting and Incumbency: The New Voter Effect
Chapter 5 District Geography and Voters
Part 6 Part II - Race and Redistricting in the Old and New Millennia
Chapter 7 Race, Redistricting, and the Courts
Chapter 8 From Beer to Eternity: Why Race Will Always Predominate Under the Voting Rights Act
Chapter 9 Minorities and Representation in the New Millennium
Part 10 Case Studies in the Old and New Millennia
Chapter 11 The Art of the Dummymander: The Impact of Recent Redistrictings on the Partisan Makeup of Southern House Seats
Chapter 12 The Republicans Take Control: The 2001 Redistricting in Michigan
Chapter 13 All Quiet on the Western Front: Redistricting and Party Competition in California House Elections
Chapter 14 Family Feud in Massachusetts: How Intra-party Dynamics Influence Redistricting
Chapter 15 Iowa and the Political Consequences of Playing Redistricting Straight
Part 16 Redistricting in the New Millennium: — Problems and Solutions
Chapter 17 Redistricting in Texas: Institutionalization Republican Ascendancy
Chapter 18 Missing the Target: The Supreme Court, "One Person, One Vote," and Partisan Gerrymandering
Redistricting in the New Millennium cogently explores the most political of all institution decisions: drawing district lines. This excellent collection of essays by top-notch authors makes a fine contribution to the literature.
— John C. Green, University of Akron