Wisconsin
Activities to Understand Redistricting
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Review population trends with Wisconsinites On the Move, an interactive demonstration of population movement in the state over three time periods.
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Discuss how to prioritize redistricting criteria using Flashes of Insight cards or an online game.
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Describe and map your community with online tools from Representable.org to understand what issues are important in your neighborhood and region. Use both written and geographic descriptions to explain your community.
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Practice using geospatial technology tools in preparation for drawing sample electoral district lines with accessible, step-by-step instructions.
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What Is a Gerrymander?, Esri GeoInquiries for Government
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Wisconsin ArcGIS Online Redistricting Exercise (2010 census data)
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Draw electoral districts with 2020 Census data using open-source geospatial technology tools.
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Explore Districtr and District Builder.
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Examine the "Notable Maps" detailed in Dave's Redistricting App to investigate different approaches to drawing electoral district lines.
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Analyze redistricting maps, including any maps you created, the existing approved state maps, and various proposed maps in Dave's Redistricting App.
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Evaluate the fairness of electoral district maps using PlanScore, from the Campaign Legal Center.
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Explore the partisan lean data from FiveThirtyEight to consider which party might benefit from a particular map.
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Investigate the Redistricting Report Card, from the Princeton Gerrymandering Project.
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Learn about issues in your community that are affected by people who represent you at the local, state, and national levels.
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Who else do you vote with? Who are your elected representatives? How did the lines change from the previous districts? How do your city, county, school board, state, and congressional districts fit together? Did your districts grow or shrink in area? How would you describe your districts (competitive, gerrymandered, representative)?
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Recall the information you identified while describing your community. What else do you need to consider when drawing districts? What watershed do you live in? What school districts serve your area? What issues are decided by state legislatures and local elected bodies that you care about?
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What suggestions do you have for the people who will draw the lines in 2030?
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Organizations and Resources
- Ballotpedia (website with overview and data)
- Wisconsin Census Data (website)
- Can You Put These Gerrymandered States Back Together Again? (article and activity)
- Chris Kirk and Mark Joseph Stern, Slate, April 19, 2020
- Milwaukee Community Map (website with educational resources beyond Milwaukee)
- Reflo Sustainable Water Solutions
- People's Map Commission (website)
- PMC Map Submission Portal (click “How to Map,” then “Map Communities”)
- Redistricting in Wisconsin, Legislative Reference Bureau (document)
- Wisconsin Demographic Services Center (FSCPE website)
- Wisconsin Fair Maps Coalition (website)
- Wisconsin Maps Assessment Project (approaches to analyzing fairness of maps)
Perspectives
- Wisconsin Gerrymandering: The Fight for Permanent Fair Maps and Why it Matters, Tim Cullen, 2024 (book)
- Wisconsin Redistricting 2020 - 2022 (report)
- Mapped Out, Wisconsin Public Radio (podcast)
- Wisconsin Redistricting With Geographers: Fair Representation (panel discussion)
- American Association of Geographers, Redistricting Panel Series, What can geographers do?
- Accessible to the public, but requires you to sign in