The Slow Undoing : The Federal Courts and the Long Struggle for Civil Rights in South Carolina /
"Author Stephen Lowe provides the first comprehensive study of legal action in South Carolina, beginning in the mid-1930s, when Charles Hamilton Houston established the framework for the assault on segregation, and continuing well into the post-Brown era. He situates the study within the histor...
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| Format: | Électronique eBook |
| Langue: | Inglés |
| Publié: |
Columbia, South Carolina :
University of South Carolina Press,
[2021]
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| Collection: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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| Sujets: | |
| Accès en ligne: | Texto completo |
Table des matières:
- "This couldn't have been ignorance" : challenging the White Primary in the 1940s
- Not equal, but still separate : challenging Jim Crow education in the 1940s 30
- "Unexampled courage" : school desegregation in the 1950s
- "Plessy has not been overturned" : law and resistance in the late 1950s
- "We don't allow colored people in here" : segregation to "integration with dignity," 1959-63
- "We have not yet run out of courts" : desegregation in the mid-1960s
- "We've run out of courts, and we've run out of time" : freedom of choice and school desegregation to 1970
- Desegregation, not integration : South Carolina Since 1968.


