Michael Zuckerman has written an article (available on westlaw at 35 JCUL 217) for the Journal of College and University Law. From the introduction: “In Part I, this Note discusses the history, scope, and current application of the ‘one person, one vote’ principle. Then, Part II.A considers whether actions of elected student governments at public colleges and universities constitute state action, and whether these student bodies are sufficiently governmental to trigger ‘one person, one vote.’ Assuming they are, Part II.B then focuses on the apportionment schemes used by UGSGA and MSA to argue that these and similar schemes violate the Fourteenth Amendment. Finally, notwithstanding constitutional constraints, Part II.C argues that student government compliance with ‘one person, one vote’ overlaps with good practice.”