Institutional Control of Redistricting and the Geography of Representation

A number of states have empowered independent redistricting commissions (IRCs) to redraw legislative districts each decade following the US Census. Reformers see IRCs, which have binding authority and political independence, as a solution to the practice of gerrymandering and have proposed using the...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of politics 2017-04, Vol.79 (2), p.722-726
Hauptverfasser: Edwards, Barry, Crespin, Michael, Williamson, Ryan D., Palmer, Maxwell
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container_title The Journal of politics
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creator Edwards, Barry
Crespin, Michael
Williamson, Ryan D.
Palmer, Maxwell
description A number of states have empowered independent redistricting commissions (IRCs) to redraw legislative districts each decade following the US Census. Reformers see IRCs, which have binding authority and political independence, as a solution to the practice of gerrymandering and have proposed using them throughout the United States. With less incentive to protect incumbents, do IRCs adhere more closely to traditional redistricting principles, such as drawing compact districts, maintaining continuity, and respecting political subdivisions? We examine a large sample of congressional and state legislative districts and find that, relative to legislatures, IRCs tend to draw more compact districts, split fewer political subdivisions, and may also do a better job of preserving the population cores of prior districts.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy; EBSCOhost Political Science Complete
subjects Census
Election districts
Geography
Independence
Legislative bodies
Legislative districts
Legislators
Legislatures
Political science
Political systems
Redistricting
Representation
SHORT ARTICLE
State government
Tribunals & commissions
title Institutional Control of Redistricting and the Geography of Representation
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