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Districting for a Low-Information Electorate icon.pdf E-mail
  

121 Yale L.J. 1846 (2012).

Most commentary on redistricting is concerned with fairness to groups, be they
racial, political, or geographic. This Essay highlights another facet of the redistricting problem:
how the configuration of districts affects the ability of low-information voters to secure
responsive, accountable governance. We show that attention to the problem of voter ignorance
can illuminate longstanding legal-academic debates about redistricting, and that it brings into
view a set of questions that deserve our attention but have received little so far. District designers
should be asking how alternative maps are likely to affect local media coverage of representatives,
as well as the “branding” strategies of political party elites. Bearing these questions in mind, we
offer some tentative suggestions for reform.