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.
Being on parole or probation shouldn’t stop the formerly incarcerated from voting
A former top corrections official in Louisiana, the country’s incarceration capital, lays out why everyone would be better off if the formerly incarcerated can vote, regardless of whether they are on probation or parole
Open LinkJudge orders Gov. Scott, Cabinet to create system to restore voting rights of people with past felony convictions
A judge on Tuesday ordered Gov. Rick Scott and the cabinet to dismantle Florida’s “fatally flawed” system of arbitrarily restoring voting rights to people with past felony convictions and to replace it by April 26.
Open LinkGeorgia lawmaker trying to cut Sunday voting says it’s not about race. The data says it is. ThinkProgress
Wash. gov signs universal voter registration law The Hill
Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D) on Monday signed a package of measures aimed at increasing voter participation that would create potentially hundreds of thousands of new voters — in a state that already has one of the highest turnout rates in the country.
Open LinkLouisiana appeals court hears arguments on VOTE v. Louisiana The Advocate (Baton Rouge newspaper), Feb. 27, 2018
A Baton Rouge-based state appeals court wrestled Tuesday with the thorny legal question of whether formerly incarcerated people who are now on probation and parole should be allowed to vote in Louisiana. Attorneys for the state and a group of felons challenging current Louisiana law debated the phrase “under an order of imprisonment” before a three-judge panel of the state 1st Circuit Court of Appeal at the LSU Law Center.
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