On an Ordinary African-American Citizen Negotiating Voting Rights and Voter Intimidation in Ohio 2012

Cardozo Journal of Dispute Resolution Blog (April 2014)

University of Toledo Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2014-05

43 Pages Posted: 12 Jan 2014 Last revised: 29 Jan 2020

See all articles by Benjamin Davis

Benjamin Davis

University of Toledo College of Law

Date Written: December 15, 2014

Abstract

I thank the Cardozo Journal for Conflict Resolution for the opportunity to present at the November 5, 2012 Symposium, “Negotiating the Extremes: Impossible Political Dialogues in the 21st Century.” This article builds on my presentation about my experience at a voter integrity group named True the Vote meeting at its Ohio Summit on August 25, 2012 and subsequently. As I have reflected on that experience it seemed that it might be useful to examine that experience through four lenses. First, I tell the personal story. Next, I reframe the experience in terms of negotiation theory with regard to difficult conversations. In making that reframing, it did occur to me that the negotiation theory analysis I was doing might be well informed by recent work on explicit bias, implicit bias and stereotype threat that could have been a second order frame around the negotiation. Third, given the positive and negative reactions to me in that space over that day and in subsequent events, I was drawn back again to Derrick Bell’s work on interest convergence theory. Fourth, with these three strands operating as the ordinary citizen experiencing a kind of dissociative moment that led to a certain galvanizing of my own activity, I was brought back to the work of Francesco Alberoni’s on how movements get started and in particular a person reaches what he terms the nascent state, seeks affinity with others and movement and institution were also relevant. Through these four lenses, I hope to assist reflection on a manner of thinking about negotiating extremes in settings of impossible political dialogue.

Keywords: Alternative Dispute Resolution, Voting Rights, interest convergence

Suggested Citation

Davis, Benjamin, On an Ordinary African-American Citizen Negotiating Voting Rights and Voter Intimidation in Ohio 2012 (December 15, 2014). Cardozo Journal of Dispute Resolution Blog (April 2014), University of Toledo Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2014-05, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2377511 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2377511

Benjamin Davis (Contact Author)

University of Toledo College of Law ( email )

2801 W. Bancroft Street
Toledo, OH 43606
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
72
Abstract Views
798
Rank
589,395
PlumX Metrics