Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Spring 2012
Abstract
Democracy does not implement itself; a society’s commitment to govern itself democratically can be effectuated only through law. Yet as soon as law appears on the scene significant choices must be made concerning the legal structure of democratic institutions. The heart of the study of election law is thus the examination of the choices that our laws make in seeking to structure a workable system of democratic self-rule. In this essay, written for a symposium on Teaching Election Law, I describe how my Election Law course and materials focus on questions of choice in institutional design by emphasizing election law’s connection to two fields with which it is inextricably allied: democratic theory and empirical political science. This enriched context reveals election law for what it truly is: the institution that bridges the gap between our aspirations for, and the frequently messy reality of, our political lives. It is the middle term in an equation that specifies whether and to what extent we realize perhaps the most significant dream of contemporary human beings: to live well under a just and lasting democracy.
Publication Title
Saint Louis University Law Journal
First Page
689
Last Page
699
Required Text
Reprinted with permission of the Saint Louis University Law Journal © 2012 St. Louis University School of Law, St. Louis, Missouri.
Recommended Citation
James A. Gardner,
Election Law as Applied Democratic Theory,
56
St. Louis U. L.J.
689
(2012).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.law.buffalo.edu/journal_articles/219