Technological Change, Voting Rights, and Strict Scrutiny

Henry L. Chambers Jr.

When technology obviates the need for an election law that prevents some otherwise eligible voters from casting a ballot, a jurisdiction's retention of that law and refusal to adopt the technology should be deemed a serious infringement of the right to vote that triggers strict scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution.

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Technologies of Travel, “Birth Tourism,” and Birthright Citizenship

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“Don’t Confuse Me with the Facts”: The Use and Misuse of Social Science on the United States Supreme Court