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Regardless of which political party Americans identify with, the
sentiment that those who work in Washington are corrupt transcends
partisanship. Since the breaking of the Watergate scandal, trust in
the government has decreased significantly. While Congress did not
engage in the Watergate break-in, the institution has still
suffered the consequences, seeing citizens' distrust of politicians
grow. However, Congress is not blameless, as it has had its share
of scandal and corruption over the years. Scandal and Corruption in
Congress guides readers through the history of corruption in
Congress. Specifically, readers explore policies outlawing
corruption, how Congress has attempted to hide unethical behaviour,
getting caught, the repercussions of getting caught, and how
corruption in the U.S. compares to corruption in other nations.
Finally, to enlighten readers about the recent actions by Congress,
several chapters address the impact of Citizens United and the
#MeToo movement.
Barack Obama, the first African-American president of the United
States. In a country with a rich history of racial animosities,
Obama represents a notable deviation in the trajectory of America's
presidential history. At the close of his second term in office, a
survey of the personalities and events associated with his
presidency is fitting. In this walk through recent history we will
be keen to point out the president's successes, failures, and
challenges. Governing in a society ripe with ideological and
partisan polarization, the Obama Administration was surrounded by
controversy, much of it manufactured by his opponents but salient
nonetheless. This volume will attempt to provide perspective and
clarity on the most important individuals and experiences connected
to Obama during his eight years in office, but also his early life.
Information included in this volume also includes discussion of his
transition out of office and events taking place at the beginning
of the Donald Trump Administration. This second edition of
Historical Dictionary of the Barack Obama Administration contains a
chronology, an introduction, appendixes, and an extensive
bibliography. The dictionary section has over 300 cross-referenced
entries on important personalities, including the president, his
advisors, his family, his opponents, and his critics, as well as
members of Congress, military leaders, and international leaders.
This book is an excellent resource for students, researchers, and
anyone wanting to know more about Barack Obama.
The U.S. Congress can be traced to the founding and the debates in
Philadelphia in the summer of 1787, but to suggest that the
Congress in the first decade of the 21st century is the same
Congress that was created over 220 years ago would be wildly
misleading. The entries in this volume will elaborate on the
original compromises and the ensuing evolution of legislative
practice and review how Congress has developed through several
distinctive eras. This second edition of Historical Dictionary the
U.S. Congress contains a chronology, an introduction, and an
extensive bibliography. The dictionary section has over 500
cross-referenced entries on the key concepts, terms, labels, and
individuals central to identifying and comprehending the key role
Congress plays in the history of the U.S. This book is an excellent
resource for students, researchers, and anyone wanting to know more
about the U.S. Congress.
In the wake of Shelby County v. Holder and the January 6 Capitol
insurrection, changes to election laws, policies, and especially
access to voting have become a key political battleground. A
central point of contention is whether new restrictive voting laws
intentionally discriminate against Black and Hispanic
subpopulations in the United States. Conversely, do policies that
expand voting access favor Democrats and increase the possibility
of election fraud?In The Cost of Voting in the American States,
Michael J. Pomante II, Scot Schraufnagel, and Quan Li test these
questions. The authors look specifically for systematic outcomes
produced by distinctive election policies in the American states.
First, they establish a competent measure of voting restrictions to
begin this unraveling. The authors create a Cost of Voting Index
(COVI) for the fifty states, which uses a statistical procedure to
extract an underlying dimension and to determine significance from
state laws based on how restrictive the polices are. The authors
call the underlying dimension extracted the “cost of voting.”
With this measure in place, they evaluate which states have a
higher cost of voting, how this cost impacts who votes, and whether
there is a correlation between the cost of voting and minority
populations. Using Racial Threat Theory arguments, the authors
demonstrate that states with larger or growing Black and Hispanic
populations have more restricted voting, and that these restrictive
voting laws disproportionately demobilize these populations in
predictable ways. States with a higher cost of voting also show
lower minority electoral success as well as a larger gap in Black
and female representation, and the authors reveal that decreasing
the cost of voting does not lead to fraud or favor one party over
another. The Cost of Voting in the American States makes a case for
a new preclearance formula, and the COVI provides a viable approach
for future election law.
In the wake of Shelby County v. Holder and the January 6 Capitol
insurrection, changes to election laws, policies, and especially
access to voting have become a key political battleground. A
central point of contention is whether new restrictive voting laws
intentionally discriminate against Black and Hispanic
subpopulations in the United States. Conversely, do policies that
expand voting access favor Democrats and increase the possibility
of election fraud?In The Cost of Voting in the American States,
Michael J. Pomante II, Scot Schraufnagel, and Quan Li test these
questions. The authors look specifically for systematic outcomes
produced by distinctive election policies in the American states.
First, they establish a competent measure of voting restrictions to
begin this unraveling. The authors create a Cost of Voting Index
(COVI) for the fifty states, which uses a statistical procedure to
extract an underlying dimension and to determine significance from
state laws based on how restrictive the polices are. The authors
call the underlying dimension extracted the “cost of voting.”
With this measure in place, they evaluate which states have a
higher cost of voting, how this cost impacts who votes, and whether
there is a correlation between the cost of voting and minority
populations. Using Racial Threat Theory arguments, the authors
demonstrate that states with larger or growing Black and Hispanic
populations have more restricted voting, and that these restrictive
voting laws disproportionately demobilize these populations in
predictable ways. States with a higher cost of voting also show
lower minority electoral success as well as a larger gap in Black
and female representation, and the authors reveal that decreasing
the cost of voting does not lead to fraud or favor one party over
another. The Cost of Voting in the American States makes a case for
a new preclearance formula, and the COVI provides a viable approach
for future election law.
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