1,133 research outputs found
Teamwork and Racing
Faculty reflection on VCU Great Bike Race Book course.
Course Description: Students will examine how individuals work as a team toward a shared goal, focusing on the “international-human” side of the race
North Korea vs United States of America Relations
Today we are currently faced with a dilemma between both the United States, and North Korea. It has slowly become increasingly difficult to fix due to many underlining issues such as politics, propaganda, and stereotypes. As we now approach a new decade, however, one may ask if it were possible at all for the two respected countries to actually have a conversation between both their leaders, and their citizens also
Opt-Out Voting
This article proposes a new system of casting ballots at elections: opt-out voting. Opt-out voting would change the default rule for voting. Currently most registered voters go to a polling place to select a candidate. In contrast, opt-out voting would randomly pre-select a candidate for each registered voter and then allow the registered voter to switch the ballot to his or her preferred candidate. This article theorizes that switching to opt-out voting could lead to an increase in voter turnout, especially in local elections. This article argues that increasing participation, particularly on the local level, would be a positive change because it would make the voting electorate more representative of the population as a whole
Judicial Enforcement of a Grand Election Bargain
This Article seeks to combine these strains of the literature to argue for a world
where, at the very least, a state's adoption of a strict photo identification law, such
as Indiana's photo identification law, would result in that state's advance
registration requirement being declared unconstitutional by either the federal or
state judiciary. In arguing for this result, this Article endorses Professor Tokaji's
grand bargain as a matter of policy, but remains skeptical that such a grand bargain
could ultimately be forged in Congress (or even at the state legislative level). This
Article also sympathizes with those commentators who desire the judiciary to
enjoin advance voter registration requirements, but views very broad judicial
intervention as unlikely. Instead, this Article advocates for a more limited judicial role that might ultimately serve as a way station to ultimately achieving a system of
election administration that universally embraces Election Day registration
What Has Twenty-Five Years of Racial Gerrymandering Doctrine Achieved?
In 1993, Shaw v. Reno created a doctrine of racial gerrymandering that has now been in existence for twenty-five years. This Article examines the doctrine’s impact over that time—whether it has achieved the goals the Court set out for the doctrine in Shaw and whether it has had other consequences. This Article examines the doctrine’s impact through the lens of the place where the doctrine first took root and has been most heavily litigated over the last twenty-five years—North Carolina’s congressional districts. This Article also draws upon the existing empirical literature in its assessment of the doctrine’s impact. In so doing, this Article represents the first comprehensive assessment of the doctrine. Ultimately, the Article concludes that while more research could and should be done in this realm, racial gerrymandering doctrine does not appear to have achieved the goals the Court set out for it. In addition, the doctrine has likely had little additional impact other than to make districts more compact and cost state governments money for litigation and compliance. For these reasons, the Article concludes that the doctrine should be abandoned absent additional research documenting a systematically meaningful positive impact on American democracy
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