This is the only full-length study to examine how different
electoral systems impact the election of women and minorities to
public office in the United States. Rule and Zimmerman have brought
together leading scholars to show how different systems affect
local, state, and national elections. Important demographic
changes, new opportunities, and formidable problems are underscored
in analyses of the effects of, among many other things, cumulative
voting, judicial election systems, multimember and single-member
districts, and reapportionment.
This study is unusual in combining an overall analysis of
electoral systems and case material with proposals for making
government more representative, inclusive, and responsive. Criteria
are provided for evaluating the equity of electoral systems. The
election of women and minorities to Congress is reviewed carefully,
and options for increasing this direct representation of minorities
and women are considered. Case studies describe legislative
elections in several states. In-depth studies deal with local
elections, cumulative and limited voting systems, alternative
judicial electoral systems, and proportional representation.
Academics and professionals who study political parties and
electoral systems, minority politics, and women's studies will find
this work to be especially intriguing and important.
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