2022
DOI: 10.1089/elj.2021.0032
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Representing People and Places: Castaway Voters and the Racial Disparity in Redistricting

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“…Although a key feature of modern discrimination is its veneer of gentility, we know from private documents that were never intended for public consumption that the drawing of district lines can be a product of pure venality. In Ohio, a consultant drawing district lines after the 2010 Census referred to African‐American neighborhoods in Columbus as “dogmeat” as he attempted to divide them from majority‐white areas (Niven and Solimine 2022). Legislators in several southern states, meanwhile, used racial epithets as shorthand when referring to majority‐African‐American districts (Combs 2016).…”
Section: Structural Racial Disparities and Redistrictingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although a key feature of modern discrimination is its veneer of gentility, we know from private documents that were never intended for public consumption that the drawing of district lines can be a product of pure venality. In Ohio, a consultant drawing district lines after the 2010 Census referred to African‐American neighborhoods in Columbus as “dogmeat” as he attempted to divide them from majority‐white areas (Niven and Solimine 2022). Legislators in several southern states, meanwhile, used racial epithets as shorthand when referring to majority‐African‐American districts (Combs 2016).…”
Section: Structural Racial Disparities and Redistrictingmentioning
confidence: 99%