Publikacja:
Common Forms of Gerrymandering in the United States
Data
2019
Artykuł
Ładowanie...
Pliki
Nazwa pliku Keena et al.pdf
Rozmiar:448.01 KB
Licencja
Cytowanie
Alex Keena, Michael Latner, Anthony J. McGann, & Charles Anthony Smith. (2019). Common Forms of Gerrymandering in the United States. Collective and Individual Decisions, 32. https://doi.org/10.7206/DEC.1733-0092.130
Słowa kluczowe
gerrymanderyzm manipulacja wyborcza Kongres Stanów Zjednoczonych partie polityczne
Abstrakt
Gerrymandering is a form of voting manipulation whereby electoral district boundaries are drawn to produce a partisan or political bias in elections. In this paper, we study partisan gerrymandering in the United States to understand its undemocratic outcomes and how the design of election institutions can promote or prevent gerrymandering. We begin with a survey of the history of gerrymandering, with a particular focus on partisan
gerrymandering. We then consider the normative standards of fairness in democracy that partisan gerrymandering may violate. Next, we present a typology of partisan gerrymandering based upon the district maps drawn in California, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New Jersey for the 2012 elections. Using the partisan symmetry method, we estimate the seats/votes curves of the congressional maps used in 38 states during the 2012 elections. We find that partisan gerrymanders occur almost exclusively when politicians are given control over redistricting. This analysis implies that a political
designer, who wants to minimize gerrymandering, should not put redistricting in the hands of politicians.