Vol. 62 No. 4, June 2012
Index
- From Baker v. Carr to Bush v. Gore, and back.
- Baker, Bush, and ballot boards: the federalization of election administration.
- Judicial protection of popular sovereignty: redressing voting technology.
- Population equality and the imposition of risk on partisan gerrymandering.
- The one person, one vote standard in redistricting: the uses and abuses of population deviations in legislative redistricting.
- One person, one vote? Why citizens' votes carry unequal weight despite Baker and how it matters.
- Congress, the solicitor general, and the path of reapportionment litigation.
- Baker v. Carr, the census, and the political and statistical geography of the United States: the origin and impact of Public Law 94-171.
- Redistricting principles for the twenty-first century.
- Getting to "sometimes": expanding teachers' First Amendment rights through "Garcetti's caveat".
- No longer secret: overcoming the state secrets doctrine to explore meaningful remedies for victims of extraordinary rendition.
- Empty creditor syndrome and vivisepulture: preventing credit-default-swap holders from pushing companies into premature graves by refusing to negotiate restructurings.