Capitol Hill and stairs @Samuel Schroth / unsplash.com

The Right To Vote in the U.S. – and the Difficulties To Do so

Friday, October 25, 2024, 9 a.m. - 2 p.m.

The right to vote has been contested throughout U.S. history. It took a long time, a Civil War, and many struggles to achieve universal voting rights that also included racial minorities and women—at least on paper. Only the Voting Rights Act in 1965 finally secured the right to vote for millions of African Americans in much of the U.S. South. That, however, has not made voting fully equal. There are still many hurdles to get registered and then actually cast a ballot. Ever since the Supreme Court in 2013 declared major parts of the Voting Rights Act unconstitutional (Shelby County v. Holder), the floodgates have opened for states to change their voting laws—oftentimes in highly partisan ways.

This teacher seminar will provide a deeper look at Constitutional and political developments regarding the right to vote, at the ongoing debate about and challenges to voting rights in the United States, and will also discuss reform efforts.

Schedule:
09:00 Intro
09:15 The U.S. Constitution, Voting Rights, and Elections
09:45 Fighting for the Universal Voting Right: Constitutional Amendments and the Voting Rights Act
11:00 Coffee Break
11:30 Shelby County v. Holder and the Consequences
12:15 Current Challenges and Possible Reforms
13:00 Open Discussion
14:00 End

Registration fee: € 10 per teacher seminar

Please register via our registration form or online via FIBS.
FIBS: Stiftung Bayerisches Amerikahaus gGmbH


Photo: @ Samuel Schroth / unsplash.com

Dr. Andreas Etges ©Andreas Etges

About Dr. Andreas Etges

Dr. Andreas Etges is a historian at the Amerika-Institut of Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich. He regularly teaches classes on U.S. politics and the American political system and is frequently interviewed by German and international media on US politics, elections, and on Transatlantic relations.

 

Stiftung Bayerisches Amerikahaus gGmbH

Amerikahaus

Karolinenplatz 3, 80333, München

Sarah Ackermann

Leiterin Recherchezentrum, Programme Schüler*innen und Lehrkräfte

E-Mail
ackermann@amerikahaus.de
bibliothek@amerikahaus.de

Telefon
089 55 25 37-20

Johannes Elle

Werkstudent  Recherchezentrum, Programme Schüler*innen und Lehrkräfte

E-Mail
elle@amerikahaus.de
bibliothek@amerikahaus.de

Telefon
089 55 25 37-20