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Governance & Power

How democratic institutions actually work—and for whom. We investigate Supreme Court doctrine, voting rights litigation, municipal rebellion, particip...

How democratic institutions actually work—and for whom. We investigate Supreme Court doctrine, voting rights litigation, municipal rebellion, participatory budgeting, judicial activism, executive immunity, and the administrative state. From Chevron deference to bilingual governance, legal architecture shapes daily life.

16 articles

Solar panels on Puerto Rican rooftops with the island's mountainous landscape in the background, bathed in golden sunlight
governance

The Colony of Kilowatts

Puerto Rico's democracy, bankruptcy, and the grid that could teach the mainland how to heal. If you want to see the United States without makeup, fly to San Juan and wait for the lights to flicker. In that twitch you can read the whole civics lesson: a people who are citizens without a presidential.

July 10, 2025
A congressional district map of Louisiana with voting rights symbols and Supreme Court building in the background
governance

The Case That Wants to Erase the Map

Louisiana v. Callais and the quiet attempt to end Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Some revolutions arrive as fireworks. Others arrive as docket numbers. Louisiana v. Callais is the latter—a case that began as a fight over one congressional map and swelled into a vehicle that could cripple or.

July 7, 2025
Bilingual voting booth with ballots in English and Spanish, emergency alerts on phones, and permit applications representing government services
governance

The Bilingual Switch

How to run elections, permits, and emergencies in two languages—and why it makes a republic smarter. Every morning, millions of Americans begin their day in Spanish and end it in English (or vice versa). The republic is bilingual in fact, yet too many of our most consequential interactions with.

July 3, 2025
Supreme Court justices' portraits reflected in mirrors with legal documents and constitutional text layered in the composition
governance

The Art of Calling Someone Else an Activist

Conservative judging since the 1980s—and the paradox of a movement that won by denouncing its own reflection. The term 'judicial activism' is the judiciary's favorite insult and our public square's dullest knife. Everyone uses it to describe the decisions they don't like; few define it before.

June 30, 2025
The Supreme Court building with constitutional text and judicial opinions layered in the background, rendered in sepia tones
governance

The Activists Who Said They Weren't

How a conservative legal movement rewrote American law from the 1980s to today. For forty years, the conservative legal movement has sold a deceptively simple ethic: judges should interpret, not make, the law. The method was restraint; the result was revolution.

June 26, 2025
Historic Spanish colonial documents and modern digital interfaces layered together, showing the bridge between analog memory and digital access
governance

El Archivo

Building the bilingual memory infrastructure the United States forgot it needed. A country that cannot search its past will mis-govern its future. Ours keeps half its memory in another language—acequia minutes, merced deeds, mission ledgers, notarial protocols, diseños, parish censuses—a.

June 23, 2025