A minority-majority district is a congressional district whose boundaries are drawn to maximize minority voting power.
Congressional districts are administrative divisions of a larger administrative region that represent a region's population in the larger congressional body. In other countries, they are known as electoral districts, legislative districts, wards, and electorates. Notably, electoral districts in Australia are referred to as "electorates" or "seats," whereas in Canada, they are referred to as "constituencies" or, more colloquially, "ridings." Congress has districts in the United States, the Philippines, and Japan.
Majority-minority districts may be established to avoid or correct violations of the Voting Rights Act of 1965's prohibition on drawing redistricting plans that limit a racial or language minority's ability to elect its preferred candidates. Affirmative racial gerrymandering may result in majority-minority districts in some cases. The importance of drawing district lines to create majority-minority districts is debated both within and outside of minority communities.
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Be present in class always. ask questions. do your home work thoroughly. keep trying
The ~unequal~ statuses of different individuals in a society. for example, a doctor has a higher social status than a janitor working at the same hospital. the doctor might be awarded for his work, while the janitor is mostly ignored. the doctor may also have come from a fairly wealthy family and received a good education, while the janitor may have had economic disadvantages and a poor quality education. so the doctor and the janitor are socially unequal. social inequality is very closely connected to economic inequality, so if you ever see the phrase "socio-economic inequality," that's why.