Race and Democratic Contestation

IF 5.2 1区 社会学 Q1 LAW Yale Law Journal Pub Date : 2008-03-01 DOI:10.2307/20455811
Michael S. Kang
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

As the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (VRA) passes its fortieth anniversary and soon faces constitutional challenges to its recent renewal, a growing number of liberals and conservatives once united in their unqualified support now share deep reservations about it. In this Article, I argue that the growing skepticism about the VRA and majority-minority districting is misguided by a simplistic and impoverished sensibility about the value of electoral competition in American politics. Electoral competition should be judged with reference to ultimate end states it is intended to produce - more democratic debate, greater civic engagement and participation, and richer political discourse - all of which are generated by a deeper first-order competition among political leaders that I describe as 'democratic contestation.' In the Article, I offer democratic contestation, in place of electoral competition, as a basic value to be pursued in the law of democracy and as foundation for new theory that helps reconcile approaches to race, representation, and political competition. A theory of democratic contestation shifts the normative focus from the pluralist absorption about which groups get what from politics, to a new focus on the tenor and quality of democratic contestation among leaders. When viewed through a theory of democratic contestation, the VRA is crucially pro-competitive in the broader sense of democratic contestation. By carving out safe majority-minority districts, the VRA breaks the discursive stasis of racial polarization in which politics by definition revolve around the single axis of race. A theory of democratic contestation reveals how majority-minority districts energize the process of democratic contestation and enable an internal discourse of ideas that moves beyond the racially polarized divide, otherwise impossible in the face of racial polarized opposition. A theory of democratic contestation thus demands a thorough re-evaluation of the Supreme Court's recent decision in LULAC v. Perry and provides a new understanding of the renewed VRA going forward in the modern political world of national partisan competition.
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种族与民主党竞争
随着《1965年投票权法案》(VRA)通过40周年,并很快面临宪法对其最近更新的挑战,越来越多的曾经无条件支持的自由派和保守派现在对它持深刻的保留态度。在这篇文章中,我认为对VRA和多数少数族裔选区的日益增长的怀疑是被对美国政治选举竞争价值的简单化和贫乏的敏感性所误导的。选举竞争应该参照它所要产生的最终状态来评判——更多的民主辩论,更多的公民参与和参与,以及更丰富的政治话语——所有这些都是由政治领导人之间更深层次的一级竞争产生的,我称之为“民主竞争”。在这篇文章中,我提出以民主竞争取代选举竞争,作为民主法则中追求的基本价值,并作为有助于调和种族、代表制和政治竞争方法的新理论的基础。民主辩论理论将规范性的焦点从关于哪些群体从政治中得到什么的多元吸收转移到对领导人之间民主辩论的内容和质量的新关注上。从民主竞争理论的角度来看,VRA在更广泛意义上的民主竞争中至关重要。通过划分出安全的多数少数族裔选区,VRA打破了种族两极分化的话语停滞,在这种状态下,政治从定义上讲是围绕种族这一单一轴心进行的。民主竞争理论揭示了少数民族占多数的选区如何激发民主竞争的进程,并使内部的思想话语能够超越种族两极分化,否则在面对种族两极分化的反对时是不可能的。因此,民主竞争理论要求对最高法院最近对LULAC诉佩里案的裁决进行彻底的重新评估,并对国家党派竞争的现代政治世界中更新的VRA提供新的理解。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
6.20%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Yale Law Journal Online is the online companion to The Yale Law Journal. It replaces The Pocket Part, which was the first such companion to be published by a leading law review. YLJ Online will continue The Pocket Part"s mission of augmenting the scholarship printed in The Yale Law Journal by providing original Essays, legal commentaries, responses to articles printed in the Journal, podcast and iTunes University recordings of various pieces, and other works by both established and emerging academics and practitioners.
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