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Speaking of Galbraith
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 276

Speaking of Galbraith

From humble beginnings on a farm in southern Ontario to an endowed chair in economics at Harvard University, John Kenneth Galbraith has led a life of high achievement and adventure. Written by long-time friend and noted journalist Peggy Lamson, Speaking of Galbraith allows us to meet the man who has led one of the most celebrated lives of the 20th century. 8-page photographic insert.

Is it Asking Too Much?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 12
Women, Elections, & Representation
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 304

Women, Elections, & Representation

The first women representatives in the United States were elected in 1894 when Colorado votes sent three women to the state legislature. Now, a century later, women almost everywhere are the majority of voters but a distinct minority of elected officials. This discrepancy is a puzzle for those who thought democratic institutions would incorporate newly enfranchised women, and a problem for those working to expand democratic representation. Darcy, Welch, and Clark examine women candidates and candidacies in the United States and several other democratic nations. Their careful analysis reveals that male voters and political elites are not the barriers to women's election that common wisdom sug...

Welcoming Ruin
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 697

Welcoming Ruin

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2018-11-26
  • -
  • Publisher: BRILL

The Civil Rights Act of 1875, enacted March 1, 1875, banned racial discrimination in public accommodations – hotels, public conveyances and places of public amusement. In 1883 the U.S. Supreme Court declared the law unconstitutional, ushering in generations of segregation until 1964. This first full-length study of the Act covers the years of debates in Congress and some forty state studies of the midterm elections of 1874 in which many supporting Republicans lost their seats. They returned to pass the Act in the short session of Congress. This book utilizes an army of primary sources from unpublished manuscripts, rare newspaper accounts, memoir materials and official documents to demonstrate that Republicans were motivated primarily by an ideology that civil equality would produce social order in the defeated southern states.

Sisters in Law
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 354

Sisters in Law

Ranging from the 1860s when women first sought entrance into law to the 1930s when most institutional barriers had crumbled, this book defines the contours of women's integration into the most rigidly gendered profession.

Millicent Fenwick
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 318

Millicent Fenwick

Amy Schapiro offers a biography of the pipe-smoking grandmother from New Jersey who took Congress by storm in the 1960s when she became involved in the civil rights movement. 18 black-and-white photos.

Roger Baldwin
  • Language: en

Roger Baldwin

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Keeper of the Concentration Camps
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 374

Keeper of the Concentration Camps

Analyzing the career of Dillon S. Myer, Director of the War Relocation Authority during WWII and Commissioner of the Bureau of Indian Affairs from 1950-53, Richard Drinnon shows that the pattern for the Japanese internment was set a century earlier by the removal, confinement, and scattering of Native Americans.

The Struggle in Black and Brown
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 312

The Struggle in Black and Brown

It might seem that African Americans and Mexican Americans would have common cause in matters of civil rights. This volume, which considers relations between blacks and browns during the civil rights era, carefully examines the complex and multifaceted realities that complicate such assumptions—and that revise our view of both the civil rights struggle and black-brown relations in recent history. Unique in its focus, innovative in its methods, and broad in its approach to various locales and time periods, the book provides key perspectives to understanding the development of America’s ethnic and sociopolitical landscape. These essays focus chiefly on the Southwest, where Mexican American...

Roger Nash Baldwin and the American Civil Liberties Union
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 531

Roger Nash Baldwin and the American Civil Liberties Union

Roger Nash Baldwin's thirty-year tenure as director of the ACLU marked the period when the modern understanding of the Bill of Rights came into being. Spearheaded by Baldwin, volunteer attorneys of the caliber of Clarence Darrow, Arthur Garfield Hays, Osmond Frankel, and Edward Ennis transformed the constitutional landscape. Company police forces were dismantled. Antievolutionists were discredited (thanks to the Scopes Trial). Censorship of such works as James Joyce's Ulysses was halted. The Scottsboro Boys and Sacco and Vanzetti were defended. The right of free speech for communists and Ku Klux Klansmen alike was upheld, and the foundations were laid for an end to school segregation. Robert...