The Right to Vote: Rights and Liberties Under the LawBloomsbury Publishing, 20 Okt 2004 - 453 halaman From its roots in early English rules to its practice today, this work covers the evolution, expansion, and ongoing debates regarding "the first liberty" in America. The Right to Vote: Rights and Liberties under the Law tracks the expansion of the franchise in America from colonial times to the present. Opening with a case study establishing the importance of access to the ballot, the main emphasis shifts to pivotal points in American history including the hard-fought struggles for women's suffrage and racial equality. A chapter on 21st-century voting rights addresses the most unsettled issue we face today—the use of majority-minority districts to enhance the political influence of African Americans and Latinos. A parting look at free and fair elections and the 2000 presidential election debacle shows how votes not counted or improperly credited can make a mockery of the democratic process. |
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Halaman 113
... South Carolina . From that pool of 20 , Tilden needed only 1 to reach the minimum majority of 185 , and thus the White House . To reach the same magic number , Hayes required all 20 . Democrats were acutely aware of the fact that in 3 ...
... South Carolina . From that pool of 20 , Tilden needed only 1 to reach the minimum majority of 185 , and thus the White House . To reach the same magic number , Hayes required all 20 . Democrats were acutely aware of the fact that in 3 ...
Halaman 164
... south- ern suffragists that an expanded franchise would help preserve white in the South . Southern white men found unper- supremacy suasive arguments such as those advanced by Belle Kearney when the NAWSA met in New Orleans in 1903 for ...
... south- ern suffragists that an expanded franchise would help preserve white in the South . Southern white men found unper- supremacy suasive arguments such as those advanced by Belle Kearney when the NAWSA met in New Orleans in 1903 for ...
Halaman 188
... South . White southerners accepted the outcome of the war and promised to rec- ognize the status of the recently emancipated blacks . Northern whites promised to leave southern whites in charge of their own affairs . They were indeed ...
... South . White southerners accepted the outcome of the war and promised to rec- ognize the status of the recently emancipated blacks . Northern whites promised to leave southern whites in charge of their own affairs . They were indeed ...
Isi
Introduction | 1 |
Origins | 33 |
Toward a Nearly Universal White Manhood | 56 |
Hak Cipta | |
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The Right to Vote: Rights and Liberties under the Law Donald Grier Stephenson Pratinjau terbatas - 2004 |
The Right to Vote: Rights and Liberties Under the Law D. Grier Stephenson Pratinjau tidak tersedia - 2004 |
Istilah dan frasa umum
African Americans American political apportionment ballot Bandemer black voting Buhle candidates cast century chise citizens citizenship civil rights colonies Congress Constitution convention County Declaration delegates democracy Democratic denied disfranchised effect elec electoral votes eligible enforce enfranchised equal protection clause federal female suffrage Fifteenth Amendment Fourteenth Amendment franchise freedom freehold Georgia gerrymander grandfather clause Grovey House of Representatives immigrants judicial Justice Keyssar legislature liberty literacy tests majority majority-minority majority-minority districts male ment minority Moreover Nineteenth Amendment officials party system percent person political party polls population President presidential election Progressivism proposed question race ratification redistricting registration representation Republican right to vote rule Section Senate slavery South southern standard state's statute suffragists Supreme Court decision Texas tion tional turnout U.S. Supreme Court United University Press violation Virginia voters voting age Voting Rights Act Wesberry white primary Wilson woman suffrage women York