In this Book

The Disenfranchisement of Ex-Felons

Book
Elizabeth A. Hull, foreword by Representative John Conyers, Jr.
2009
summary
In the 2004 presidential election, 4,686,539 Americans—a population greater than the city of Los Angeles—were barred from the polls. In a country that has extended suffrage to virtually every other class of citizen, ex-felons are the sole segment of our population deemed unworthy to exercise what the Supreme Court has called "the right preservative of all other rights," the right to vote.

The Disenfranchisement of Ex-Felons provides a comprehensive overview of the history, nature, and far-reaching sociological and political consequences of denying ex-felons the right to vote. Readers learn state practices in Florida and Ohio during the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections; arguments that have been used in court houses, legislatures, and the press to justify such practices; and attempts to reverse legislation through state and federal governments. In a timely appendix to the 2004 election, Elizabeth Hull makes her case that the battle for civil rights will not be won unless ex-felons, who have fulfilled their obligations to society, are restored the same rights afforded all other American citizens.

Table of Contents

Cover

Frontmatter

Contents

pp. vii

Foreword by Representative John Conyers, Jr.

pp. ix-xii

Acknowledgments

pp. xiii-xiv

1. Introduction

pp. 1-15

2. The History of Disenfranchisement Laws

pp. 16-23

3. The Toll on Minority Communities

pp. 24-29

4. Collateral Damages and Clemency

pp. 30-42

5. Justifications for Disenfranchisement: Pragmatic, Principled, and Philosophical

pp. 43-54

6. Reform: Interest Groups and Strategies

pp. 55-67

7. State Reforms

pp. 68-80

8. Voting: Constitutional and Civic Concerns

pp. 81-95

9. Constitutional Challenges and the Voting Rights Act

pp. 96-113

10. Cruel and Unusual Punishment and International Law

pp. 114-126

11. The Political Consequences of Disenfranchisement

pp. 127-137

12. Thinking the Unthinkable

pp. 138-148

Afterword

pp. 149-154

Notes

pp. 155-196

Selected Bibliography

pp. 197-210

Index

pp. 211-217
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