Video

Highlights

  • Injecting Transparency into Redistricting

    Thomas Mann: This round of redistricting could usher in a new age of transparency and participation due in part to new tools that empower the community to actively participate in the redistricting process.

    Thomas E. Mann

  • GOP Could Re-Draw 145 Districts

    Tim Storey, National Conference of State Legislatures: With the findings of the 2010 census, the GOP can re-draw about 145 U.S. House districts compared with 50 for the Democrats, but that doesn’t mean they will because of the way the law is written.

  • Towards a New Political Culture

    Quentin Kidd, Christopher Newport University: Virginia’s political culture doesn’t do much to encourage openness and participation, but what we’re seeing now is something of a reform movement working to change that.

  • Coalitions Pushing for Greater Transparency

    Cindi Canary, Illinois Campaign for Political Reform: The process for establishing voting districts must be transparent and new coalitions are coming together around the country to work toward this goal.

  • The Public Mapping Project

    Micah Altman: The Public Mapping Project provides a means for voters to create the districts they want and it provides insight on how communities look to people who live in them.

Audio

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Summary

The drawing of legislative district boundaries is among the most self-interested and least transparent systems in American democratic governance. All too often, formal redistricting authorities maintain their control by imposing high barriers to transparency and to public participation in the process. Reform advocates believe that opening that process to the public could lead to different outcomes and better representation.

On January 20, Brookings hosted a briefing to review how redistricting in the 50 states will unfold in the months ahead and present a number of state-based initiatives designed to increase transparency and public participation in redistricting. Brookings Nonresident Senior Fellows Micah Altman and Michael McDonald unveiled open source mapping software which enables users to create and submit their own plans, based on current census and historical election data, to redistricting authorities and to disseminate them widely. Such alternative public maps could offer viable input to the formal redistricting process.

After each presentation, participants took audience questions.

Learn more about Michael McDonald's Public Mapping Project »

Event Agenda

  • Session 1: A Status Report on Redistricting in the United States

    • Moderator

      Thomas E. Mann

      Senior Fellow, Governance Studies

      The W. Averell Harriman Chair

    • Tim Storey

      Senior Fellow

      National Conference of State Legislatures

    • Clare Dyer

      Manager, Mapping and Redistricting Section

      Texas Legislative Council

  • Session 2: Redistricting Software Tutorial

  • Session 3: Transparency and Public Participation

    • Moderator: Norman Ornstein

      Resident Scholar

      American Enterprise Institute

    • Cindi Canary

      Director, Illinois Campaign for Political Reform

    • Derek Cressman

      Regional Director of State Operations for Western States

      Common Cause

    • Quentin Kidd

      Associate Professor

      Christopher Newport University

    • Nancy Tate

      Executive Director

      The League of Women Voters of the United States

Details

January 20, 2011

9:00 AM - 12:00 PM EST

The Brookings Institution

Falk Auditorium

1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications

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