Because testifying as an expert witness is so involved, consuming much time and effort, younger scholars are often discouraged from taking this on. If higher education institutions ounted this toward merit and promotion, it would be easier to recruit more expert witnesses, Agarwal suggests.
In short, we really need more scholars who can serve as expert witnesses in this area of law.
Angela Valenzuela
Historians as Expert Witnesses: Can Scholars Help Save the Voting Rights Act?
Kritika Agarwal, February 2017 / Perspectives on History, Then and Now: The AHA Annual Meeting
Shortly
after “Bloody Sunday” in Selma, Alabama, in March 1965, civil rights
activists outside the White House demand voting rights for African
Americans. Library of Congress
Peyton McCrary recently retired from the Civil Rights
Division of the US Department of Justice, where he coordinated expert
witness testimony in voting rights cases. “Historians have played
significant roles [in voting rights cases] for 36 years now,” he said
during the session “Historians as Expert Witnesses,” organized by the
National History Center at the 2017 AHA annual meeting in Denver. As
about 15 attendees listened, McCrary and his co-panelists Orville Vernon
Burton and J. Morgan Kousser (along with chair Alan Kraut) explained
what made historians so valuable as expert witnesses.
“Nobody but a historian could possibly figure out the intent underlying the adoption of the law in question.”
Historians first testified in a voting rights case in Bolden v. City of Mobile, which went to trial in 1976. As McCrary wrote in the Southern University Law Review,
the plaintiffs sought to overturn the practice of at-large elections in
Mobile, Alabama, and historians were not initially consulted. In 1980,
the Supreme Court ruled that it wasn’t enough for the plaintiffs to show
the effect of at-large elections; they also had to show that the intent
behind the practice was discriminatory. The Court remanded the case to
federal court. It was there, wrote McCrary, that attorneys called on
historians and political scientists to show that at-large elections
exclude minority representation and result in vote dilution. McCrary and
Kousser presented detailed evidence about the history of elections in
Mobile; the court eventually ruled against the city’s use of at-large
elections.
Since Bolden, historians have become a
near-constant presence in voting rights cases, which generally hinge on
two questions. First, was a voting qualification or procedure adopted
with racially discriminatory intent? Second, does the “totality of the
circumstance of the local electoral process” (Section 2 of the Voting
Rights Act as amended in 1982) suggest that an adopted voting
qualification or procedure has had the effect of denying minorities the
opportunity to vote or has diluted their voting strength? Historians’
expertise has provided evidence for assessing intent and totality of
circumstance. At first, said McCrary at the session, “nobody but a
historian could possibly figure out the intent underlying the adoption
of the law in question.” Only historians had the professional skills to
analyze historical sources, gather evidence, understand context, and
arrive at meaningful conclusions. And historians used a variety of
documents to get at the root of intent, including city records, census
data, geographic records, legislative records, and newspaper coverage.
Historians’ testimony has had significant impact in voting
rights cases. American University’s Allan Lichtman has testified in over
75 civil and voting rights cases (and was actually unable to attend the
annual meeting due to an impending trial). In League of United Latin American Citizens v. Perry
(2005), the Supreme Court cited an expert report of his in ruling that a
congressional district in Texas violated the Voting Rights Act. In an
interview, he also recalled a small but symbolic redistricting case
involving Dallas County, Alabama (the seat of which is Selma), in which
his testimony led the Court of Appeals “to require a system of fair
districts to be drawn.” “I drew those districts in what became known as
the Lichtman Plan,” he said. “In fact, one of the former white members
of the [county] commission said, ‘If we adopt this plan, we might as
well change the name of Dallas County to Lichtman County, Alabama!’ And
he did not mean that in a complimentary way.”
Serving as an expert witness doesn’t necessarily follow an
academic historian’s typical practice on the job. On the one hand,
testimony must be based on evidence and meet professional standards of
the discipline. On the other, appearing on the witness stand is part of
an adversarial process, unlike the generally collaborative and collegial
nature of the academy. “It’s not like giving an academic paper,” said
Lichtman. Lawyers from the opposing side often produce counter-testimony
from other experts, attempting to tear holes in the historians’
analysis. Lichtman also said that historians must “have the expertise to
write and present analysis and information in a way that a layperson
attorney and a layperson judge can understand.”
It isn’t hard to find historians taking part in cases
involving Indian treaty rights, water rights, or European war crimes
trials. Perhaps the best-known case is Brown v. Board of Education.
Historians including John Hope Franklin, C. Vann Woodward, and Alfred
H. Kelly assisted the NAACP in developing the argument that Congress and
the states had anticipated public school desegregation in ratifying the
14th Amendment. The most contentious might be the sex discrimination
case Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Sears, Roebuck and Company.
Historians Rosalind Rosenberg and Alice Kessler-Harris testified on
opposing sides, with the courts ruling that Sears had not engaged in sex
discrimination in its hiring, promotion, and payment practices.
Historians who serve as expert witnesses in voting rights
cases are frequently skilled in quantitative analysis, particularly in
determining “racial polarization.” “The degree to which voting patterns
were racially polarized is an important factor and is often referred to
by judges as the linchpin of a voting rights case,” said McCrary.
Determining whether voting is racially polarized usually requires
statistical analysis of electoral data on the precinct level. In other
words, historians in such cases perform statistical analysis and
frequently call on research in other disciplines, particularly political
science and sociology. Historians who can do this sort of work are
rare. “I’ve had to explain to lawyers that there is no one with
experience in testifying on the intent question in voting rights cases
who isn’t either already collecting Social Security or is about to,”
said McCrary. “They need new blood.”
“We are three old guys,” said Kousser. “We’ve testified for
a long time in voting rights cases, and there are very few younger
people coming up to take our places when we die.” Steven F. Lawson,
professor emeritus at Rutgers, who has also served as an expert witness
in voting rights cases, agrees. In an interview after the annual
meeting, he said, “You’ll notice that this group—if you add me to it—and
a few others who’ve [testified], consist exclusively of men. And, oddly
enough, they’re white men.” Lawson explained that there was no
“conspiracy” behind this—historians who’d begun testifying in voting
rights cases in the 1980s and beyond were historians “who studied the
political process and were interested in institutions like the courts.”
When they were brought in on cases that proved successful, lawyers kept
asking the same group of historians to testify. “They had a proven
record,” said Lawson, and “success brought with it a certain type of
repetition.” Furthermore, he explained, among younger scholars entering
the discipline in the 1980s and the 1990s, a shift in research interests
from formal political history to social and cultural history resulted
in fewer historians with the requisite research background to testify in
voting rights cases.
At the panel, Kousser emphasized that testifying was a
“civic exercise” and one way for historians to “affirm our public
purpose.” While testifying as an expert witness can be financially
lucrative, it does not benefit scholars in an academic context, which
often discourages younger historians from getting involved. Kousser
recommended that such work be taken into account in hiring, promotion,
and tenure decisions, in recognition of the fact that expert witness
testimony requires an immense commitment of time and energy. If there
were a clear benefit to their careers, panelists believed, younger
historians and women would consider serving as expert witnesses.
There have been conferences and institutes to encourage and
train historians, but Kousser said that these needed to happen in a
more systematic fashion. Lawson also suggested that agencies that bring
voting rights cases to court (including the ACLU, LULAC, NAACP, and the
Department of Justice) must do a better job recruiting younger scholars
from diverse groups to testify. Finally, McCrary noted that historians
need to do better in equipping younger scholars with the tools,
particularly quantitative and statistical skills, that would generate
expertise to testify in voting rights cases. As a new administration
moves into Washington, DC, and as the future of the Voting Rights Act
hangs in the balance, these historians’ call could help determine the
fate of the right to vote.
Kritika Agarwal is associate editor, publications, at the American Historical Association. She tweets @kritikaldesi.
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