Alabama – Government, Society, Politics

Constitutional framework

Alabama is governed by a bicameral legislature and a governor and cabinet. The legislature consists of the Senate, with 35 members, and the House of Representatives, with 105 members, who meet annually in regular sessions; members of both chambers are elected for four-year terms. The constitution is a complex document dating from 1901, with hundreds of subsequent amendments. The chief administrative officers of the state, ranging from the governor to the state Board of Education, are also all elected for four-year terms. The state Supreme Court of nine elected members is the highest judicial body.

At the county level the chief elected officials in Alabama are the county commissioners, judges of probate, tax assessors and collectors, and boards of education. In the municipalities there is no uniform system of government; the mayor-council form is most common, but some cities have a commission, and some employ a city manager.

Alabama’s penal system has been stretched well beyond capacity. Although the rate of imprisonment for violent crimes peaked in the early 1990s before beginning a steady decline, more citizens have been incarcerated for drug-related offenses. Alabama typically ranks among the top states for the highest murder rate per capita. The state built new prisons in the 1980s and ’90s and for a time reinstituted a system of convicts working on state roads; the program was abandoned near the end of the 20th century.

The Democratic Party of Alabama long held political control of the state government, but the reins shifted toward Republican control in the late 20th century. In 1986 the state elected its first Republican governor since Reconstruction, and, beginning in the 1990s, Republicans, usually from suburban areas, won places in the state legislature, on judicial benches, and in local government bodies. Although Democrats continued to control the state legislature for several decades, most white Democratic representatives were fairly conservative in political orientation. In the 21st century, greater polarization within the national parties left little room for conservative Democrats, however, and the legislature flipped to the Republicans in 2011. At the national level, Republicans generally comprise the majority of the Alabama delegation, and Republican presidential candidates have won the state in most elections since 1964. African Americans holding public office had become well established by the 1970s, and Birmingham elected its first African American mayor in 1979. Several political organizations have helped increase African American participation in the political process.

Education

Elementary and secondary education in Alabama improved substantially in the latter half of the 20th century, though public schools in the state have continued to suffer from weak local funding resulting from the state’s low property taxes. Teachers’ salaries have been rising, but still rank among the lowest in the country. Rural schools receive less support than those in urban and metropolitan areas.

Alabama has state-supported four-year colleges, private colleges and universities, a large network of junior colleges and trade schools, and, increasingly, online degree-granting institutions. The University of Alabama system comprises the state’s original college at Tuscaloosa and newer campuses in Huntsville and Birmingham, the latter being home to a nationally renowned medical centre. Auburn University and Alabama A & M (Agricultural and Mechanical) University, the state’s two land-grant institutions, provide the headquarters for agricultural extension work. Many African American college students are enrolled in historically Black institutions, the best-known of which is Tuskegee University (founded in 1881), which was the home of its founder, Booker T. Washington, and of the renowned agricultural chemist George Washington Carver.

Higher education in Alabama suffers from duplication of effort caused by the overabundance of institutions, which dilutes resources. This duplication was the product of both a dual system for racial separation that persisted into the 1960s and a tendency to build schools as political favours.

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