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Gerrymandering Texas

A legal insider’s account of redistricting

The story of Texas redistricting and Steve’s professional life shared substantial overlap over a long and meaningful period of time. It is doubtful that there are many, if any, persons who had such a deep involvement in these issues over such an extended and critical period in the history of Texas redistricting. Thus, as the reader goes through many of the following chapters, he or she will have the benefit of the perspective of an author who, in the words of the Hamilton musical, was literally in the room where it happened. —From the foreword by C. Robert Heath

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Gerrymandering Texas

s t E v E Bick ER st AFF • Edit E d B y c . Ro BER t hEA th

WhAt iF gerrymAndering WAs not JUst A hot-button contemporary political issue but actually a deep story of how Texas came to be?

Gerrymandering Texas uses relevant legislation and court cases to tell the political history of the state of Texas. Writing out of decades of experience as an assistant attorney general, senate parliamentarian, expert consultant on redistricting, and law professor, Steve Bickerstaff traces the story of this political practice from 1836 up to the present and prognosticates what lies ahead for the 2020 census and 2021 redistricting.

Since redistricting is the story of boundaries, borders, and representation, Bickerstaff’s book also tells the story of Texas’s evolution over time. The various Texas constitutions are unpacked, and the changing racial makeup of the state comes into sharp relief. Democrat dominance in state governance gives way to the recent Republican dominance. Bickerstaff’s analysis of redistricting, always clear-headed and even-handed, gives new insight into the history of the Lone Star State.

Gerrymandering Texas intersperses history and legal analysis with first-person stories of the author’s own many experiences with redistricting, from trying cases to serving as expert witness to consulting during the latest Texas constitutional convention.

Steve Bickerstaff (1946–2019) was an attorney who initially was with the State of Texas as Parliamentarian of the State Senate, Director of the State Office of Constitutional Research, and Assistant Attorney General. During much of this time, Steve was also an adjunct professor at the University of Texas Law School teaching constitutional law and voting rights. Steve authored six books and at least twenty-four law review articles and chapters in law anthologies. Most of these writings are about election issues. C. Robert (Bob) Heath is an attorney in Austin, Texas. He has advised the legislature and many local jurisdictions on redistricting and has been counsel in multiple redistricting cases, including some discussed in the book.

tExAs / politics

256 pp., 6 x 9, index, 10 halftones $24.95 paperback 978-1-68283-073-4 $9.95 ebook 978-1-68283-074-1

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