We now reach the central geographic pillar of the entire series. Gerrymandering is not an anomaly; it is a weaponized exploitation of a known spatial paradox called the Modifiable Areal Unit Problem (MAUP). Because voting data is collected at a granular level (precincts or Census blocks) but evaluated at an aggregated level (districts), the mathematical outcome changes entirely depending on how the district shape is drawn. This specific phenomenon is called the Zonation Effect. In this module, we dissect the quantitative metrics used to detect the Zonation Effect and explore the devastating Supreme Court decision that officially gave state legislatures permission to weaponize it.

In This Module

  • Covers: The conceptual definition of MAUP and the Zonation Effect, the "Efficiency Gap" mathematical metric, and the ruling in Rucho v. Common Cause.
  • Why it matters: If you cannot name and measure the Zonation Effect, you cannot prove to a court that a map is rigged. You must be able to prove mathematically that one party is systematically wasting more votes than the other.
  • After this module, the reader can: Understand the foundational geometry of packing and cracking, and calculate the basic Efficiency Gap for an election.

Reading List

Start Here

  • 1. Moon Duchin and Olivia Walch (Editors), Political Geometry: Mathematical Tools for Redistricting (2021)
    Diagnostic [Scale lens]
    The essential spatial textbook for modern districting. Start with the introductory chapters, which flawlessly visualize the Modifiable Areal Unit Problem. The authors demonstrate how holding a population completely static, while simply re-drawing the aggregated "zones" on top of them, can wildly flip a 60/40 Democratic electorate into a 40/60 Republican legislature.
  • 2. Nicholas O. Stephanopoulos and Eric M. McGhee, "Partisan Gerrymandering and the Efficiency Gap" (University of Chicago Law Review, 2015)
    Prescriptive [Scale lens]
    We introduced this paper as a theoretical bridge in Course 1; here, we demand a full technical reading. The Efficiency Gap mathematically calculates the Zonation Effect by comparing "wasted votes." If a mapmaker packs minority voters into a single district where they win by 80% (wasting 29% surplus), and cracks them in neighboring districts where they lose with 49% (wasting all 49%), the Efficiency Gap easily detects the rigging.

Going Deeper

  • 3. United States Supreme Court, Rucho v. Common Cause (2019)
    Diagnostic [Community sovereignty lens]
    A devastating ruling for community power. Despite acknowledging that partisan gerrymandering is "incompatible with democratic principles," the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that federal courts cannot strike down mathematically proven partisan gerrymanders because it presents a "political question." This single decision forced all redistricting litigation out of federal courts and down into 50 fragmented state supreme courts.

For Legal and Policy Practitioners

  • 4. FiveThirtyEight, The Atlas of Redistricting (2018)
    Both
    An interactive requirement for organizers. The Atlas explicitly models the Zonation Effect across all 50 states by re-drawing maps based on different goals: maximizing competition, maximizing minority representation, maximizing compactness, or maximizing partisan advantage. Practitioners must use this to understand that there is no "perfect" map—every boundary choice requires a democratic tradeoff.

Core Concepts & Inquiries

What is the Efficiency Gap in redistricting?

The Efficiency Gap is a mathematical metric developed by Stephanopoulos and McGhee that detects partisan gerrymandering by comparing wasted votes. If a mapmaker packs minority voters into one district where they win by 80% (wasting 29% surplus) and cracks them across neighboring districts where they lose with 49% (wasting all 49%), the Efficiency Gap quantifies the resulting asymmetry.

What is the difference between packing and cracking in gerrymandering?

Packing concentrates a targeted community's voters into a single district where they win by an overwhelming margin, wasting their surplus votes. Cracking disperses the same community across multiple districts so they lack the concentration to win any seat. Both are applications of the Zonation Effect—the deliberate exploitation of how district boundary placement changes election outcomes.

What did Rucho v. Common Cause decide about partisan gerrymandering?

Despite acknowledging that partisan gerrymandering is "incompatible with democratic principles," the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that federal courts cannot strike down mathematically proven partisan gerrymanders because it presents a "political question." This decision forced all redistricting litigation out of federal courts and into 50 fragmented state supreme courts.

Why is there no such thing as a perfectly fair redistricting map?

FiveThirtyEight's Atlas of Redistricting demonstrates that every boundary choice involves a democratic tradeoff. Maps can be optimized for competition, minority representation, compactness, or partisan advantage—but optimizing for one goal necessarily sacrifices another. The Modifiable Areal Unit Problem guarantees that no single map can simultaneously satisfy all fairness criteria.