Since the earliest days of the Republic, lawmakers have drawn legislative districts to entrench their party's power — a practice known as gerrymandering, after Elbridge Gerry, the Massachusetts governor who signed a particularly partisan map into law in 1812. Math has made modern gerrymandering more effective than ever before, but now math is being used to fight gerrymandering as well. Join mathematician and educator Ben Blum-Smith and discover how recent advances in mathematics are being used to work for fairer elections.
Special introduction by Dan Zaharopol, Executive Director, The Art of Problem Solving Initiative & Bridge to Enter Advanced Mathematics.
Math Encounters is a public presentation series celebrating the spectacular world of mathematics, presented by the Simons Foundation and the National Museum of Mathematics.
For further information, call the National Museum of Mathematics at (212) 542-0566 or e-mail mathencounters@momath.org.
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