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Index
Acknowledgments
Voice, Trust, and Memory 3
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
Representation as Mediation
II. Groups and Representation: The Need for a Political Sociology of Groups and the Flaws of Descrip
III. Trust and Political Representation
IV Burke
V Madison
VI. Calhoun
VII. J. S. Mill
VIII. Conclusion
Liberal Equality and Liberal Representation
1. Liberal Equality
II. Liberal Representation
III. Liberal Representation, Geographic Districts, and Gerrymandering
IV The Limits of Liberal Representation
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 of Liberal Representation
IV. Shaw v. Reno and Its Progeny: Back 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
Voice: Woman Suffrage and the Representation of "Woman's Point of View"
1. 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
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
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
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
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