This year is the 70th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, arguably the Supreme Court’s most iconic decision. The American Journal of Law and Equality is publishing a symposium on the topic, and I am one of the participants. A draft of my contribution, entitled “Brown, Democracy, and Foot Voting,” is now available on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
Traditional assessments of Brown‘s relationship to democracy and popular control of government should be augmented by considering the ways it enhanced citizens’ ability to “vote with their feet” as well as at the ballot box. Brown played a valuable role in reinforcing foot voting, and this has important implications for our understanding of the decision and its legacy.
Part I of the article summarizes the relationship between foot voting and ballot box voting, and how the former has important advantages over the latter as a mechanism of…