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Abstract
The Voting Rights Act of 1965, along with its extensions and amendments, is the crown jewel of American democracy. While the Act contains strong medicine — for example, the preclearance provision that is currently before the Supreme Court — that medicine remains necessary.
Section 5 of the act continues to play a major role in protecting the voting rights of minority citizens. In the past 25 years, Section 5 has been used to block more than 1,000 discriminatory changes that would have impaired the rights of literally millions of voters in covered jurisdictions.
These changes included restrictive registration practices, voting roll purges, moving polling places to make them less accessible to minority voters, as well as discriminatory annexations and adoptions of at-large election systems that made it more difficult for minority communities to elect representatives to local and state governing bodies.
Other publications by this author
- Constitutional Law, 6th ed.
- Validating Congress's Approach
- Voting Rights and the Third Reconstruction
- Keeping Faith with the Constitution
- What Can Brown® Do For You?: Neutral Principles and the Struggle Over the Equal Protection Clause
- The Law of Small Numbers: Gonzales v. Carhart, Parents Involved in Community Schools, and Some Themes From the First Full Term of the Roberts Court
- Petition for a Writ of Certiorari
- Reply Brief for the Petitioner
- Taking Politics Religiously: How Free Exercise and Establishment Clause Cases Illuminate the Law of Democracy
- Pluralists and Republicans, Rules and Standards: Conflicts of Interest and the California Experience
Author
- Pamela S. Karlan
- Stanford Law School
- karlan@stanford.edu
- 650 725.4851