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The Workplace Constitution from the New Deal to the New Right
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 429

The Workplace Constitution from the New Deal to the New Right

This book explains why most Americans lack constitutional rights on the job and can be fired for almost any reason or no reason at all.

Black and Blue
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 220

Black and Blue

In the 1930s, fewer than one in one hundred U.S. labor union members were African American. By 1980, the figure was more than one in five. Black and Blue explores the politics and history that led to this dramatic integration of organized labor. In the process, the book tells a broader story about how the Democratic Party unintentionally sowed the seeds of labor's decline. The labor and civil rights movements are the cornerstones of the Democratic Party, but for much of the twentieth century these movements worked independently of one another. Paul Frymer argues that as Democrats passed separate legislation to promote labor rights and racial equality they split the issues of class and race i...

The Lost Promise of Civil Rights
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 385

The Lost Promise of Civil Rights

  • Categories: Law

Listen to a short interview with Risa Goluboff Host: Chris Gondek | Producer: Heron & Crane In this groundbreaking book, Risa L. Goluboff offers a provocative new account of the history of American civil rights law. The Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education has long dominated that history. Since 1954, generations of judges, lawyers, and ordinary people have viewed civil rights as a project of breaking down formal legal barriers to integration, especially in the context of public education. Goluboff recovers a world before Brown, a world in which civil rights was legally, conceptually, and constitutionally up for grabs. Then, the petitions of black agricultural workers in th...

Administrative Law from the Inside Out
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 559

Administrative Law from the Inside Out

  • Categories: Law

This collection of essays interrogate and extend the work of Jerry L. Mashaw, the most boundary-pushing scholar in the field of administrative law.

Conservatives and the Constitution
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 431

Conservatives and the Constitution

Recovers a contested, evolving tradition of conservative constitutional argument that shaped the past and is bidding to make the future.

A Nation of Widening Opportunities
  • Language: en

A Nation of Widening Opportunities

  • Categories: Law

On October 11, 2013, a diverse group of civil rights scholars met at the University of Michigan Law School in Ann Arbor to assess the interpretation, development, and administration of civil rights law in the five decades since President Lyndon Baines Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act. In the volume that follows, readers will find edited versions of the papers that these scholars presented, enriched by our lively discussions at and after the conference. We hope that the essays in this volume will contribute to the continuing debates regarding the civil rights project in the United States and the world.

Lee Marvin
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 315

Lee Marvin

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2013-01-01
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  • Publisher: IPG

The first full-length, authoritative, and detailed story of the iconic actor's life to go beyond the Hollywood scandal-sheet reporting of earlier books, this account offers an appreciation for the man and his acting career and the classic films he starred in, painting a portrait of an individual who took great risks in his acting and career. Although Lee Marvin is best known for his icy tough guy roles—such as his chilling titular villain in The ManWho Shot Liberty Valance or the paternal yet brutally realistic platoon leader in The Big Red One—very little is known of his personal life; his family background; his experiences in WWII; his relationship with his father, family, friends, wives; and his ongoing battles with alcoholism, rage, and depression, occasioned by his postwar PTSD. Now, after years of researching and compiling interviews with family members, friends, and colleagues; rare photographs; and illustrative material, Hollywood writer Dwayne Epstein provides a full understanding and appreciation of this acting titan's place in the Hollywood pantheon in spite of his very real and human struggles.

Defining the Struggle
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 421

Defining the Struggle

This book punctures the myth that important national civil rights organizing in the United States began with the NAACP, showing that earlier national organizations developed key ideas about law and racial justice activism that the NAACP later pursued.

New Democracy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 385

New Democracy

  • Categories: Law

The activist state of the New Deal started forming decades before the FDR administration, demonstrating the deep roots of energetic government in America. In the period between the Civil War and the New Deal, American governance was transformed, with momentous implications for social and economic life. A series of legal reforms gradually brought an end to nineteenth-century traditions of local self-government and associative citizenship, replacing them with positive statecraft: governmental activism intended to change how Americans lived and worked through legislation, regulation, and public administration. The last time American public life had been so thoroughly altered was in the late eig...

The First Modern Risk
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 337

The First Modern Risk

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2018-06-21
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Examines Europe's first significant national policies on social welfare in the late nineteenth century, which had major implications for state-society relations.