TY - BOOK AU - Brown,Donathan L. AU - Clemons,Michael L. TI - Voting rights under fire: the continuing struggle for people of color T2 - Racism in American institutions SN - 9781440832475 AV - KF4893 .B76 2015 U1 - 324.6/208900973 23 PY - 2015///] CY - Santa Barbara, California PB - Praeger KW - Suffrage KW - United States KW - African Americans KW - Minorities KW - Election law KW - Voting KW - Racism KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE KW - Discrimination & Race Relations KW - bisacsh KW - Sociology KW - General KW - fast KW - Race relations N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 187-197) and index; Introduction: Voter identification laws then and now -- Formulating democracy : Development and evolution of voting rights in America -- Felon disenfranchisement and voting rights -- On the birth of voter identification laws : Crawford v. Marion County -- Controversy in the Keystone State : A Pennsylvania story -- In defense of voter ID : Texas v. Holder and Shelby v. Holder -- Conclusion : Current trends in voter ID laws and felon disenfranchisement -- Epilogue: A note on majority-minority growth -- Appendix: Current voter ID policy snippets N2 - "With the increasing demands for changes in how we vote, the authors analyze the complications of race tied to these proposed policies through historical and contemporary challenges"--; "Voting Rights under Fire is a timely addition to Praeger's series, Racism in American Institutions (RAI). With continued debate over existing and proposed voter ID laws and a host of other measures that seem designed to impede the ability of people of color to vote, racism as an institutional factor in American voting and politics is clear. The RAI series examines the ways in which racism has become a part of the fabric of many American institutions. For example, while the United States may have done away with overtly racist policies such as Jim Crow segregation, racism still affects many of America's established institutions from public schools to corporate offices. Similarly, schools may not be legally segregated, and yet many districts are not integrated. Voter ID laws have targeted perceived voter fraud, but there is no real fraud to speak of and hence these anti-voting measures serve to take us back to the period before the advent of the Voting Rights Act when people of color, especially black people, could not vote"-- UR - http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy16pdf02/2015005531.html ER -