The special session on redistricting was held at the 2009 Joint Mathematics Meeting on January 8, 2009. It was co-sponsored by the Russell Sage Foundation. The speakers and presentation slides are presented below.
Introduction
- Daniel Ullman, George Washington University, The Mathematical Redistricting Problem. (View his slides.)
Legal Aspects of Redistricting
- Richard Pildes, NYU School of Law, The Law and Policy of Redistricting.
- Sam Hirsch, Jenner and Block LLP, A Proposal for Redistricting Reform.
Computational Aspects of Redistricting
- Micah Altman, Harvard Univeresity, The Promises and Perils of Optimal Redistricting. (View his slides.)
- Michael McDonald, George Mason University, The Redistricting Problem: Second-Order Bias. (View his slides.)
Political Science Aspects of Redistricting
- Nathaniel Persily, Columbia University, Lessons from a Court-Appointed Nonpartisan Redistricter. (View his slides.)
- David Epstein, Columbia Unviersity, Partisan Fairness in Districting. (View his slides.)
- James Snyder, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Empirical Consequences of Redistricting in the U.S. (View his slides.)
Theoretical Aspects of Redistricting
- Francis Su, Harvy Mudd College, What Fair Division Methods Might Offer Redistricting (View his slides.)
- Alan Miller, Cailfornia Institute of Technology, A Measure of Bizarreness (View his slides.)
- Jonathan Katz, California Institute of Technology, A New Approach to Measuring the Racial Impact of Redistricting. (View his slides.)
Further Perspectives on Redistricting
- Jim Bozeman, Lyndon State College, Nearly Convex Sets and the Shape of Legislative Districts. (View his slides: 1, 2)
- Richard Freeman, Harvard Unviersity, Will Contiguous Redistricting Create Competitve Races for Legislative Elections? (View his slides.)
- Charles Hampton, The College of Wooster and Calvin College, Reflections upon almost 30 Year Involvement with Redistricting. (View his slides.)
