Resources
The following is our recommended list of Resources. Our list compiles select writings by leading academics, organizers, journalists, and litigators on topics relevant to the Right to Vote Initiative, including right-to-vote amendment language and the history of the right to vote and race. We also feature webinars and other up-to-date resources.
Room for Debate: The Battle, Not the War, on Voting Rights N.Y. Times, June 22, 2009
A distinguished group of experts, including Professor Lani Guinier, Professor Pamela Karlan, and Professor Richard Pildes, discuss voting rights in the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s decision in Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No. 1 v. Holder. Professor Guinier:
Open Link“[T]he real question is why all American citizens do not enjoy an affirmative constitutionally protected right to vote. This is the question that we dodge at our collective peril.”
Editorial: A Universal Right to Vote N.Y. Times, Mar. 11, 2013
On its Opinion Pages, the New York Times Editorial Board writes in favor of a universal right to vote:
Open Link“A country that takes pride in its democratic system should provide all voters with basic voting standards.”
Voting Rights and the Third Reconstruction, The Constitution in 2020 Jack M. Balkin and Reva B. Siegel, eds., New York: Oxford University Press, 2009
Professor Pamela Karlan asks:
Open Link“What would it mean to develop an affirmative conception of the right to vote, one in which the government has an obligation to facilitate citizens’ exercise of the franchise?”
The New Equal Protection 124 Harv. L. Rev. 747, 794-795 (2011)
Professor Kenji Yoshino discusses “equality fatigue,” and inter alia, its implications for movements built on “rights talk,” including the right to vote movement.
Open LinkIn Pursuit Of An Affirmative Right to Vote A Strategic Report, July 2008
A preliminary examination of the need to amend the U.S. Constitution in order to explicitly guarantee that all eligible Americans have a fair, equal, and inclusive voice in our democracy. The report identifies strategies that would be most effective in raising public awareness that the current combination of unduly burdensome procedures, underfunded bureaucracies and partisan officials has created a patchwork of arbitrary practices tending to contract, rather than expand the franchise.
Open Link