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When analyzing the consequences of and remedies for discrimination
 against African Americans, courts and scholars characterize African
 Americans as a minority.  This Article shows that the traditional
 approach is wrong: When it mattered, when the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
 Amendments were enacted and for decades after, African Americans were a
 majority or controlling plurality in the states where most lived.
 African American-backed majoritarian governments controlled the South
 after the Civil War; while in power, they enacted strong civil rights
 laws and created a public education system. These policies were
 reversed, and segregation imposed, not because African Americans were a
 minority, destined to lose in the majoritarian political process, but
 rather through elimination of democratic politics and imposition of
 minority rule.  African Americans and their white allies were stripped
 of their electoral majority through fraud, violence and illegal
 disenfranchisement. This Article argues that the most important harm
 African Americans suffered was something that the law has until now
 overlooked: Loss of the right to control the governments of several
 Southern states.  This injury means that current African Americans
 disadvantage likely rests on a constitutional violation; Jim Crow could
 not have happened had democracy functioned as provided in the
 Constitution. Consideration of African American majority status also
 sheds new light on the counter-majoritarian difficulty.  In reviewing
 measures oppressing African Americans, the Court did not have to balance
 majority rule against minority rights; instead, majority rule and
 constitutional rights both militated toward invalidation of laws passed
 by a minority to oppress the majority.   
The paper is available here:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=963036
Author contact info:
Gabriel "Jack" Chin, Chester H. Smith Professor of Law, Professor of Public Administration and Policy & Director, Law, Criminal Justice and Security Program
http://www.law.arizona.edu/depts/cj/default.cfm
The paper is available here:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=963036
Author contact info:
Gabriel "Jack" Chin, Chester H. Smith Professor of Law, Professor of Public Administration and Policy & Director, Law, Criminal Justice and Security Program
http://www.law.arizona.edu/depts/cj/default.cfm