From Brennan Center for Justice <[email protected]>
Subject A Push for Racially Biased Redistricting
Date July 29, 2021 10:18 PM
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Drawing new voting maps by counting only adult citizens would harm communities of color.

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[INSIDER]

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A Redistricting Gambit that Would Entrench Discrimination

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It has long been the case that when states draw legislative districts, they count everyone living there. But some conservative activists are seeking to upend that practice, advocating for states to only count adult citizens when making maps for their legislatures.

The Brennan Center’s new study of Texas, Georgia, and Missouri pinpoints just who would be harmed by such an upheaval, and the results follow a disturbing pattern of disenfranchisement. Latino, Asian American, and Black communities would bear the brunt of representational losses, as urban and suburban areas that skew young and diverse would be deprived of their fair share of political power and public goods in favor of white rural areas

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9/11 20 Years Later

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Two decades after 9/11, we can see which national security strategies have worked and which haven’t — but the government has been slow to learn these lessons. In a new essay series, experts from inside and outside the Brennan Center offer big-picture looks at where we went wrong and how to approach national security going forward

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Launching the series, Faiza Patel writes that the attacks sparked a wrongheaded wave of using race, religion, or political views as indicators for terrorism. The FBI’s rules for intelligence collection have proven inadequate to protect free speech and guard against discrimination. The result has subverted legitimate counterterrorism aims. We must revisit these permissive rules in order to ban invidious profiling under the guise of national security

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Probation and Parole as Punishment

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Community supervision began in the 19th century as a peer-to-peer system of support, in which citizens came forward to assure officials that they could help those convicted of crime to live lawfully outside of jail or prison. Public agencies later took over, and in today’s system, many of those agencies are more primed to find and punish failure than to promote success. In this installment of our Punitive Excess series

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, Peggy McGarry looks at how community supervision can be transformed back into a structure for assisting people caught up in the justice system, not hurting them further

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This Week on Instagram

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Most states are now done with their legislative sessions, and the damage to voting rights is clear: 18 states have passed 30 new laws in 2021 that make voting harder. Read more on Instagram &gt;&gt;

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Vote for the Brennan Center

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We are one of three organizations CREDO Mobile is supporting this month with part of a $150,000 grant. You can help us get funding as we fight to ensure every eligible citizen has the right to vote. Cast your vote today.

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The Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law is a nonpartisan law and policy institute that works to reform, revitalize – and when necessary defend – our country’s systems of democracy and justice.

Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law

120 Broadway, Suite 1750

New York, NY 10271

T 646 292 8310

F 212 463 7308

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