Florida Administrative Code

Florida Administrative Code
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 199?
Genre: Delegated legislation
ISBN:

Search for rules and reference materials in the Florida administrative code by chapter number or by agency; search for notices in the Florida administrative register by chapter number or FAR issues. Also contains links to Florida laws, statutes, Constitution, administrative hearings and more.

Florida Legal Research

Florida Legal Research
Author: Suzanne E. Rowe
Publisher:
Total Pages: 238
Release: 1998
Genre: Law
ISBN:

This book bridges the gap between typical legal research texts and the needs of beginning legal researchers for concise explanations of the sources they will use early in their careers. A unique feature of this book is its emphasis on the sources a Florida attorney would use to do state and federal research. Many research texts, in contrast, emphasize federal materials and include illustrations taken from a variety of federal and state jurisdictions. The book is not, however, a bibliography of Florida sources. Instead, it combines an overview of essential primary and secondary sources with an introduction to research methods that will enable a novice researcher to move beyond the sources described in the text. Moreover, its emphasis on developing a research process and analyzing the results of legal research makes it appropriate even tot those who might not be practicing or working in Florida.

The Administration of Voter Registration

The Administration of Voter Registration
Author: Thessalia Merivaki
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 183
Release: 2020-09-17
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 3030480593

This book examines the dynamics behind shifts in voter registration rates across the states and adopts a framework of collaborative governance with election administration at its center. The book starts by introducing readers to the “voter registration gap,” an aggregate measure of variance in voter registration, and demonstrates how it fluctuates between federal elections. To explain why this variance exists, the author examines the relationship between federal reforms, such as the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) and the Help America Vote Act; and state-level reforms, such as Online Voter Registration. Thessalia Merivaki argues that the weak relationship between the two is not surprising, since it hides dramatic variations in administrative practices at the local level, which take place in shorter intervals than the most frequently used two-year estimates. In closing, she shows that challenges to successfully registering to vote persist, largely because of how, when, and where eligible citizens have to register.