
Voice, Trust, and Memory
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Williams argues first that the distinctive voice of these groups should be audible within the legislative process. Second, she holds that the self-representation of these groups is necessary to sustain their trust in democratic institutions. The memory of state-sponsored discrimination against these groups, together with ongoing patterns of inequality along group lines, provides both a reason to recognize group claims and a way of distinguishing stronger from weaker claims. The book closes by proposing institutions that can secure fair representation for marginalized groups without compromising principles of democratic freedom and equality.
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Content
- Cover Page
- Half-title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Voice, Trust, and Memory
- I. Problems with Group-Based Views of Fair Representation
- II. The Structure of the Argument
- III What Is a Marginalized Group?
- IV Substantive Justice, Procedural Fairness, and Group Representation
- V. The Domain of the Argument
- One: Representation as Mediation
- I. The Problem of Fairness and the Complexity of Representation
- II. Groups and Representation: The Need for a Political Sociology of Groups and the Flaws of Descriptive Representation
- III. Trust and Political Representation
- IV. Burke
- V. Madison
- VI. Calhoun
- VII. S. Mill
- VIII. Conclusion
- Two: Liberal Equality and Liberal Representation
- I. Liberal Equality
- II. Liberal Representation
- III. Liberal Representation, Geographic Districts, and Gerrymandering
- IV. The Limits of Liberal Representation
- Three: The Supreme Court, Voting Rights, and Representation
- I. Voting Rights from Reynolds to Shaw v. Reno: The Concept of Minority Vote Dilution
- II. Difference-Blind Proceduralism and Voting Rights Doctrine
- III. From Restrictive to Expansive Readings oj Liberal Representation
- IV. Shaw v. Reno and Its Progeny: Bach to Difference-Blind Proceduralism
- V. Summary and Conclusion: Beyond Liberal Representation to Group Representation
- Appendix: The Racial Bias of Recent Supreme Court Decisions on Minority Vote Dilution
- Four: Voice: Woman Suffrage and the Representation of "Woman's Point of View
- I. Women's Claim to Individual Equality
- II. "Woman's Point of View": The Distinctive Virtue of Womanhood
- III The Functional Advantages of "Woman's Point of View
- IV. Equality and "Woman's Point of View": Hearing Different Voices
- V. Women's Voice and the Dynamics of Legislative Deliberation
- VI. Group Representation and the Limits of the Deliberative Ideal
- Five: Trust: The Racial Divide and Black Rights during Reconstruction
- I. Reconstruction: From Slavery to Citizenship to Disfranchisement
- II. Early Rhetoric: The Declaration and Color-Blind Equality
- III. The Sense of Betrayal and the Turn to Self-Representation
- IV. Trust and the American Scheme of Liberal Representation
- Six: Memory: The Claims of History in Group Recognition
- I. Critiques of Group Representation
- II. Memory
- III. History
- IV. Memory, History, and Group Representation
- V. Responses to Liberal Critiques of Group Representation
- Seven: The Institutions of Fair Representation
- I. Defining Constituencies
- II. Dynamics of Legislative Decision Making
- III. Legislator-Constituent Relations
- IV. Summary: Sketch of a Fair System of Political Representation
- Conclusion: Descriptive Representation with a Difference
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
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