ABSTRACT

This book includes every Supreme Court case relevant to elections and political representation from the Court's beginnings to 2001, including the 2001 decision in Cook v. Gralike that limited citizens' rights to instruct Federal representatives. It is a primary document reference book organized topically in sixteen chapters. Every case is included either as a full (edited) opinion, extensive excerpts of the opinion, or a detailed description of the case. As with the companion volume on gender and sexual equality, using this single volume a researcher can see how American legal history on the topic played out in its entirety. A Table of Cases, relevant Federal statutes, and an extensive bibliography further enhance the volume's usefulness.

chapter |116 pages

Voters and Voting

chapter 2|17 pages

Poll Taxes and Literacy Tests

chapter 4|21 pages

The Decennial Census

chapter 5|28 pages

Seeking Public Office

chapter 6|73 pages

Political Parties

chapter 11|20 pages

First Amendment Implications

chapter 15|30 pages

Forms of Government