Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Law
Less Than Fundamental: The Myth Of Voter Fraudand The Coming Of The Second Great Disenfranchisement, David A. Schultz
Less Than Fundamental: The Myth Of Voter Fraudand The Coming Of The Second Great Disenfranchisement, David A. Schultz
David A Schultz
This article examines the issue of voter fraud and efforts to regulate it through new photo identification requirements. The overall thesis is that voting fraud is a pretext for a broader agenda to disenfranchise Americans and rig elections. However, the more specific focus of this article is both to examine the evidence of fraud and the litigation around voter IDs thus far, and what supporters of voting rights can learn from both as they move forward and challenge these laws in the future. The Article will argue that the evidence being offered for the photo IDs does not justify the …
Lies, Damn Lies, And Voter Ids: The Fraud Of Voter Fraud, David A. Schultz
Lies, Damn Lies, And Voter Ids: The Fraud Of Voter Fraud, David A. Schultz
David A Schultz
No abstract provided.
“Regulating The Political Thicket: Congress, The Courts, And State Reapportionment Commissions", David A. Schultz
“Regulating The Political Thicket: Congress, The Courts, And State Reapportionment Commissions", David A. Schultz
David A Schultz
No abstract provided.
Democracy On Trial: Terrorism, Crime, And National Security Policy In A Post 9-11 World, David A. Schultz
Democracy On Trial: Terrorism, Crime, And National Security Policy In A Post 9-11 World, David A. Schultz
David A Schultz
Post 9-11 concerns in the United States, among the European Union (EU) members, and other western democracies regarding international terrorism forced convergence of the traditionally distinct policy areas of domestic criminal justice and national security. This convergence has produced several policy and institutional conflicts that pit individual rights against homeland security, domestic law and institutions against international norms and tribunals, and criminal justice agencies against national security organizations. This Article examines regime responses to international terrorism, principally in the United States, in comparison to the European Union, seeking to describe the consequences of the merger of criminal justice norms with …