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| Dimensions: 6'' x 9'' |
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| 218 pages |
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AEI Press
(Washington)
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| Publication Date: April 2008 |
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| Paperback |
| ISBN: 978-0-8447-4263-2 |
| Price: $ 25.00 |
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Download the full text of Deconstructing the Republic as an Adobe Acrobat PDF
Special advisory: Peacock on Obama and race identity politics
Read the press release for Deconstructing the Republic
Although the Voting Rights Act of 1965 did more to fortify American republicanism than any other civil rights legislation in American history--finally securing the right to vote for black citizens in the Jim Crow South almost one hundred years after passage of the Fifteenth Amendment--as currently implemented, the landmark law actually undermines the Founders' vision of American government.
Deconstructing the Republic: Voting Rights, the Supreme Court, and the Founders' Republicanism Reconsidered contends that the Founders' vision rests on the idea that individual citizens can choose their representatives based on public debate and argument, without regard to their race, creed, or class. Peacock argues that the way the Voting Rights Act has been implemented undermines this vision, replacing it with judicially-mandated multicultural politics.
According to Peacock, the politics of multiculturalism is an elite vision of America in which race and ethnicity are permanent features of American politics that require certain groups--blacks and Hispanics, particularly--to be awarded seats in the House of Representatives and state legislatures in proportion to their share of the population. By institutionalizing political identities based on illiberal conceptions of race and ethnicity, today's Voting Rights Act displaces the Constitution's emphasis on individual rights in favor of corporate, race-centered rights--and removes the public good from the calculus of representation.
Praise for Deconstructing the Republic
"Following the Founders' original meaning ought to be the touchstone of American politics and jurisprudence, yet Congress and the courts frequently cast aside their wisdom. Anthony Peacock's book shows how judges and politicians are misinterpreting the Voting Rights Act, replacing the Founders' vision of democratic self-government based on individual rights with a multicultural republic based on group rights. His argument should concern anyone who loves American democracy."
--Edwin Meese III, former attorney general of the United States and Ronald Reagan Distinguished Fellow in Public Policy at the Heritage Foundation
"Professor Peacock has produced a comprehensive and theoretically sophisticated account of the Supreme Court's voting rights jurisprudence. Peacock traces in detail the tortuous course of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which began as an attempt to protect voting rights against racial discrimination but under the Supreme Court's tutelage became a vehicle for requiring racial discrimination. The equal right to vote became the right to an effective vote understood in racial terms and measured by a racial results requirement. Understanding voting rights in terms of racial class rights, the Court has undermined the central principle of equal protection: that rights belong to individuals and not to racial classes. All in all, a virtual tour de force of constitutional analysis."
--Edward Erler, department of political science, California State University, San Bernardino
"Deconstructing the Republic is an extraordinary book. For anyone who wants to truly understand the Founders' concept of 'inalienable rights,' Professor Anthony Peacock has given us a new textbook. The American people are reshaping our national political landscape, reconstituting the civil contract that we have with each other and the relationship that we have as citizens to our government. Deconstructing helps us understand our history, the dynamics of current conflicts involving our 'rights,' and the consequences of making decisions that further erode republicanism as the centerpiece of America's governmental system. You owe it to yourself to read Deconstructing the Republic."
--Ward Connerly, cofounder and president, American Civil Rights Institute
Anthony A. Peacock teaches public law in the political science department at Utah State University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Plan of the Book
1. Madisonian versus Multiculturalist Republicanism
The Founder's Commercial Republicanism
Six Ways Today's VRA Threatens Madisonian Republicanism
2. Progressivism, Multiculturalism, and the Emergence of America’s "Official Minorities"
Progressivism and Historicism
Progressivism, Multiculturalism, and the Challenge to the Founders' Political Science
Multiculturalism and the Emergence of America’s "Official Minorities"
3. The Reapportionment Cases and the Origins of Judicial Rationalism
Baker v. Carr and the Reapportionment Cases
Rationalizing the Electoral Process after Wesberry and Reynolds
Setting the Stage for the Voting Rights Act
4. From the Founders' Republicanism to the Politics of Multiculturalism: The Voting Rights Act, 1965–1980
Allen and the Birth of Second-Generation Voting Rights
United Jewish Organizations and the Racial Class-Warfare Vision of America
Further Refining the Multiculturalist Vision: The 1975 Voting Rights Act and "Language Minorities"
The Evolution of the Voting Rights Act through the 1970s
5. The 1982 Amendments to the Voting Rights Act and Their Aftermath
The Debate over the 1982 Section 2 Amendments
The Supreme Court and the Intent Test
Thornburg v. Gingles: Formalizing the Right to Proportional Racial Representation
Setting the Stage for the 1990s
6. The 1990s: Shaw v. Reno and the Resurrection of the Founders' Republicanism?
Reaffirming the Law of Equal Protection: Shaw, Miller, and the Repudiation of United Jewish Organizations
The Counterassault on the Rationalism and Multiculturalism of the Voting Rights Act
The Dissenters Respond
Questions Left Unanswered
7. The Supreme Court and the Voting Rights Act after 2000: Deconstructing the Republic for Now and Forever
Georgia v. Ashcroft and the New Section 5 Test
Ashcroft and Its Implications
The Persisting Constitutional Questions
The 2006 Voting Rights Act, Perry, and the Future Deconstruction of American Republicanism
Conclusion—American Greatness and a Founders' Voting Rights Act
The Founders' Commercial Republicanism: A Blueprint for the Promotion of Liberty, Union, and Individual, Political, and Martial Excellence
A Founders' Voting Rights Act
The Founders' Rejection of Multiculturalism and Democracy as "Victimization"