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Gerrymandering and 'gobbledygook'

By Kevin R. Johnson, Justin Levitt Brian Cardile, Nicolas Sonnenburg | Oct. 6, 2017

Constitutional Law,
Government,
U.S. Supreme Court

Oct. 6, 2017

Gerrymandering and 'gobbledygook'

Loyola Law School professor Justin Levitt unpacks this week's SCOTUS arguments on political gerrymandering, and UC Davis School of Law Dean Kevin Johnson offers insights on the case considering constitutional rights of detained non-citizens

Kevin R. Johnson

Kevin is Dean and Mabie-Apallas Professor of Public Interest Law and Professor of Chicana/o Studies , UC Davis School of Law

Phone: (530) 752-8047

Harvard Univ Law School

Justin Levitt

Professor, Loyola Law School, Los Angeles

Email: justin.levitt@lls.edu

Justin helped lead the federal government's work on voting rights in the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice from 2015-17.



This week was a busy one in Washington at the Supreme Court, and two experts help explain a couple of the week's most prominent cases, 'Gill v. Whitford,' and 'Rodriguez v. Jennings.' Plus, reporter Nick Sonnenburg discusses the attorney reactions he heard after arguments in the triumvirate of employment arbitration cases

#344159

Brian Cardile

Rulings Editor, Podcast Host, 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reporter
brian_cardile@dailyjournal.com

Nicolas Sonnenburg

Daily Journal Staff Writer
nicolas_sonnenburg@dailyjournal.com

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