The Supreme Court's reapportionment decisions, beginning with Baker v. Carr in 1962, had far more than jurisprudential consequences. They sparked a massive wave of extraordinary redistricting in the mid-1960s. Both state le...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

The Supreme Court's reapportionment decisions, beginning with Baker v. Carr in 1962, had far more than jurisprudential consequences. They sparked a massive wave of extraordinary redistricting in the mid-1960s. Both state legislative and congressional districts were redrawn more comprehensively--by far--than at any previous time in our nation's history. Moreover, they changed what would legally happen should a state government fail to enact a new districting plan when one was legally required. This book provides the first detailed analysis of how judicial partisanship affected redistricting outcomes in the 1960s, arguing that the reapportionment revolution led indirectly to three fundamental changes in the nature of congressional elections: the abrupt eradication of a 6% pro-Republican bias in the translation of congressional votes into seats outside the south; the abrupt increase in the apparent advantage of incumbents; and the abrupt alteration of the two parties' success in congressional recruitment and elections.

Similar Products

Making Votes Count: Strategic Coordination in the World's Electoral Systems (Political Economy of Institutions and Decisions)Analyzing Elections (New Institutionalism in American Politics)The Politics of Congressional ElectionsSizing Up the Senate: The Unequal Consequences of Equal RepresentationElecting the Senate: Indirect Democracy before the Seventeenth Amendment (Princeton Studies in American Politics: Historical, International, and Comparative Perspectives)Bushmanders and Bullwinkles: How Politicians Manipulate Electronic Maps and Census Data to Win ElectionsThe End of Inequality: One Person, One Vote and the Transformation of American Politics (Issues in American Democracy)The British Industrial Revolution in Global Perspective (New Approaches to Economic and Social History)