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         Civil Rights Sociology:     more books (100)
  1. The History of Barrios Unidos: Healing Community Violence (Hispanic Civil Rights) by Frank De Jesus Acosta, 2007-05-31
  2. Women in the Civil Rights Movement: Trailblazers and Torchbearers, 1941--1965 (Blacks in the Diaspora)
  3. Martin Luther King and the Rhetoric of Freedom: The Exodus Narrative in America's Struggle for Civil Rights (Studies in Rhetoric and Religion) by Gary S. Selby, 2008-02-15
  4. Black Culture and the New Deal: The Quest for Civil Rights in the Roosevelt Era by Lauren Rebecca Sklaroff, 2009-12-01
  5. Literacy As A Civil Right: Reclaiming Social Justice in Literacy Teaching and Learning (Studies in the Postmodern Theory of Education) by Stuart Greene, 2008-02-01
  6. Untold Stories Civil Rights Libraries & Black Librarianship: Civil Rights, Libraries, and Black Librarianship
  7. In Search of the Black Fantastic: Politics and Popular Culture in the Post-Civil Rights Era by Richard Iton, 2010-09-09
  8. White Supremacy and Racism in the Post-Civil Rights Era by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, 2001-08
  9. The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Civil Rights [Two Volumes]: From Emancipation to the Twenty-First Century by Charles Lowery, 2003-12-30
  10. No Mexicans, Women, or Dogs Allowed: The Rise of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement by Cynthia E. Orozco, 2009-11-15
  11. Creating Change: Sexuality, Public Policy, and Civil Rights (Stonewall Inn Editions)
  12. The Civil Rights Movement in Tennessee: A Narrative History by Bobby L. Lovett, 2005-11-30
  13. Living as Equals: How Three White Communities Struggled to Make Interracial Connections During the Civil Rights Era by Phyllis Palmer, 2008-07-11
  14. Speak Now Against the Day: The Generation Before the Civil Rights Movement in the South (Chapel Hill) by John Egerton, 1995-11-06

41. U.S. Commission On Civil Rights - Webcast
D. in sociology from Columbia University. PANEL III WADE HENDERSON is ExecutiveDirector of the Leadership Conference on civil rights (LCCR), which includes
http://www.connectlive.com/events/civilrightscommission/sampling021299.html
Multimedia Center Powered by the
ConnectLive.com

Communications Network
Briefing on the Civil Rights Implications of the
Recent Supreme Court Decision on Sampling and the Census
February 12, 1999
Video of the entire briefing is available here. To view - you need the free RealMedia player software (new G2 version) installed on your computer. You can download it here; then after downloading, simply click on the downloaded program to run the automatic installation.
The briefing consisted of the following three panels:
(1) Panel 1: The Legal and Civil Rights Implications of the Supreme Court Decision

(click here to view the entire panel discussion (1 hr) , or jump to an individual below)
Matt Glavin Southeastern Legal Foundation view his remarks Mark Neuman Census Monitoring Board view his remarks Lorraine Green Census Monitoring Board view her remarks Jeffrey Wice Nat'l Conference on State Legislatures view his remarks Edward Still Lawyers Cmte for Civil Rights under Law view his remarks (2) Panel 2: Enumeration vs. Sampling: Proposals to Remedy the Undercount (click here to view the entire panel discussion (1 hr 12 min) , or jump to an individual below) Andrew Pincus Commerce Dept.

42. Lesson Planet - Social Studies,History,Civil Rights Lesson Plans
civil rights movement of the 1950s and ’60s by Available at EP store. FeaturedBook. click here to buy from socialstudies.com, Introduction To sociology
http://lessonplanet.teacherwebtools.com/search/Social_Studies/History/Civil_Righ
Grade K - 2 higher ed Search from over 20,000 online lesson plans by keyword and grade! Membership Log In User Name: Password: Apr. 04, 2003 12:07 PST Resources Other Teacher Resources Education Clip Art Grant Information Curriculum Tools Collaborative Projects ... Link To Us Teacher Discussions Click to discuss teaching topics with your peers! Pre K-6 Elem. Discussion 7-12 Sec. Discussion Ed. Tech. Discussion privacy Found lessons and other resources for ' civil rights. Web Sites Books Software Maps ... Videos More 'civil rights' books Supplies Online Courses Category matches for: ' civil rights Home/Social Studies/History Civil Rights (3) Home/Social Studies/U.S. History Civil Rights (29) Home Social Studies History ... Civil Rights Lesson Plans (1-3 of 3): Gandhi Speaks Through Clothing - Lesson Plan - Young people today know the power of how one dresses and looks to convey meaning. Wearing a cap in school, dying one's hair, and wearing labels on clothing are just a few examples of contested symbolic language, so students should be able to relate to G...
Grades: Rating: Add to Learninglinks Tell a friend!

43. Iowa Civil Rights Commission 1978 Public Hearings And Litigation
to the Iowa civil rights Commission in February, 1977. She hails from Salisbury,North Carolina, where she earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in sociology (cum
http://www.state.ia.us/government/crc/annual78hearings.html
PUBLIC HEARINGS AND LITIGATION
Hearing Officer - Barbara Snethen The hearing officer presides over administrative hearings for the Iowa Civil Rights Commission statewide, assists in the rulemaking process, and handles special assignments not inconsistent with hearing officer duties.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL - Ray Pery, Shirley Steele The duties of the Assistant Attorney Generals for the Iowa Civil Rights Commission include advising the Commission regarding an legal problems, drafting departmental rules, participating in seminars to educate the public, and representing the Commission in administrative hearings and court actions. Each of these Assistant Attorney Generals handles per month on the average of two to three administrative hearings, two to six court appearances, and three to nine briefs and/or case preparations.
Barbara Snethen Barbara Snethen became the first permanent hearing officer for the Iowa Civil Rights Commission when she started with the agency in August of 1977. Ms. Snethen, a native of Urbandale, received her Bachelor of Science degree in political science from Iowa State University in 1973 and her law degree from Drake in 1977. From 1973-1976 Ms. Snethen held the position of executive director for the Campaign Finance Disclosure Commission. During 1976-1977 Ms. Snethen was employed by the Public Employee Relations Board as an elections agent conducting collective bargaining elections for the State.

44. Iowa Civil Rights Commission Diversity Teams
of sociology. 418 E. Hall Ames, IA 50011 515294-9307. Davenport civil RightsCommission. City Hall 226 West 4th Street Davenport, IA 52801 319-326-7888.
http://www.state.ia.us/government/crc/teams.html
Home Diversity Teams
Diversity Teams
Team Contact Address Ames Diversity Appreciation Team Sheila Lundt
Ames Human Relations Commission 515 Clark Ave.
Ames, IA 50010
Cedar Rapids Diversity Appreciation Team Louise Lorenz
Cedar Rapids Civil Rights Commission 2nd Floor Veterans Memorial Building
Cedar Rapids, IA 52401
Cedar Valley Diversity Appreciation Team Walter Reed
Waterloo Commission on Human Rights 620 Mulberry
Carnegie Annex, Suite 101
Waterloo, IA 50703
Charles City International Fellowship Jim Sanner 512 15th Avenue Charles City, IA 50616 Martin Luther King, Jr. Committee (Council Bluffs) Jon Malloy Council Bluffs, IA Decorah Diversity Appreciation Team Martin Klammer E-mail: klammerm@luther.edu Luther College Decorah, IA 52101 319-387-2112 (w) 319-382-8296 (h) FAX: 319-387-2158 Denison Cultural Diversity Committee Coletta Weeda 2490 Lincoln Way Dension, IA 51442 Marsha Kracht Des Moines Service Providers Coalition Father Kevin Cameron Catholic Pastoral Center 601 Grand Avenue Des Moines, IA 50306

45. Convenings: The Resegregation Of Southern Schools? | Page 2
University, and is the former staff director of the US Commission on civil rights. AmyStuart Wells is a professor of sociology and education at the Teachers
http://www.civilrightsproject.harvard.edu/convenings/resegregation02/call_resegr

46. Resources: Civil Rights In Brief: Title I: Better Schooling For Educationally De
Refer to The civil rights Project's findings on successful programs Contact professorsat your local universities, in Education, sociology and Public Policy, to
http://www.civilrightsproject.harvard.edu/resources/civilrights_brief/titleI.php
Print This Email to a Friend Resources Civil Rights in Brief ESEA, Title I In an effort to help the community understand current basic concerns about civil rights, we have published the following Civil Rights in Brief which summarize these issues and can help you learn what you can do to protect them. Title I: Better Schooling for Educationally Deprived Students Background Title I, "Better Schooling for Educationally Deprived Students," was created to improve the quality of education for our nation's poor children. The program, an integral part of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, is the largest federal compensatory education program in American history. Since its inception, it has been the cornerstone of federal support to public education. Established in 1965 at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, Title I became the largest educational component of President Johnson's "War on Poverty". It was designed "in recognition of the special educational needs of children of low-income families and the impact that concentrations of low-income families have on the ability of local educational agencies to support adequate educational programs" (Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, Section 101). The creation of the program was an acknowledgement that education was a key part of the larger struggle to attain social, political and economic equality.

47. Sociology, Civil Rights, United States, Race Discrimination, Law And Legislation
sociology, civil rights, United States, Race discrimination, Law and legislation,Economic assistance Domestic, Education / Teaching, Law, Reference, Education
http://www.clever-bestsellers-selection.com/Halpern-Stephen-C-On-the-Limit-08018
Sociology, Civil rights, United States, Race discrimination, Law and legislation, Economic assistance Domestic, Education / Teaching, Law, Reference, Education, General, Civil Procedure Halpern Stephen C. On the Limits of the Law : The Ironic Legacy of Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act
Title: On the Limits of the Law : The Ironic Legacy of Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act
Subject: Sociology, Civil rights, United States, Race discrimination, Law and legislation, Economic assistance Domestic, Education / Teaching, Law, Reference, Education, General, Civil Procedure
Subject2 Nonfiction, Reference, Law
Author: Halpern Stephen C.
Barany Zoltan D., Volgyes Iv...

Barany Zoltan D., Volgyes Iv...

Diamond Larry Jay, Plattner ...

Redekop Calvin, Ainlay Steph...
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48. Sociology, Muslim Women, Iran, Social Conditions, Civil Rights, History, Iran -
sociology, Muslim women, Iran, Social conditions, civil rights, History, Iran History,sociology Of Women, History - General History, General, Social Science
http://www.clever-bestsellers-selection.com/Isfandiyari-Halah-Esfandiari-H-08018
Sociology, Muslim women, Iran, Social conditions, Civil rights, History, Iran - History, Sociology Of Women, History - General History, General, Social Science, Women's Studies Isfandiyari Halah, Esfandiari Haleh Reconstructed Lives : Women and Iran's Islamic Revolution
Title: Reconstructed Lives : Women and Iran's Islamic Revolution
Subject: Sociology, Muslim women, Iran, Social conditions, Civil rights, History, Iran - History, Sociology Of Women, History - General History, General, Social Science, Women's Studies
Subject2 History, Nonfiction
Author: Isfandiyari Halah Esfandiari Haleh
Cohen Michael H. Complementar...

Mershon Sherie, Schlossman S...

Branch Michael P., Philippon ...

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49. Civil Rights Projects
of sociology Kalamazoo, MI 49007 (616) 3839460 (h) (616) 387-5294 (w) X92HINTON@wmich.edu Huntley,Horace Birmingham civil rights Instititute 530 N. 16th St.
http://www.louisville.edu/library/uarc/crohpr.html
Civil Rights Oral History Projects
List as of November 13, 2000
The following is information gathered through a questionnaire distributed at the annual meeting of the Oral History Association in October 1995 and updated since that time. The information was compiled by Dr. Tracy E. K'Meyer, University of Louisville, tracyk@louisville.edu
To submit information about additional projects, choose either the form for individuals or the form for groups or oral history programs
Abron, Jonina M. Dept. Of English 313 N. Prairie Ave Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, MI Kalamazoo, MI 49006 49008 (616) 345-3478 (616) 387-2628 jonina.m.abron@wmich.edu cbolton@whale.st.usm.edu scorl1@lsueccgt.lsue.edu eckstein@blue.weeg.uiowa.edu ... r_hill@harvard.edu [gives no additional information] Hinton, Dawn Western Michigan University Dept. of Sociology Kalamazoo, MI 49007 (616) 383-9460 (h) (616) 387-5294 (w) X92HINTON@wmich.edu

50. Civil Rights Forum: Additional Resources
on the Internet; Leadership Conference on civil rights; Telecommunications; NativeAmerican rights Fund; Native State Agricultural Economics Rural sociology)
http://www.civilrightsforum.org/linkalpha.htm
Complete Alphabetical Listing of Links A B C D ... Z

51. UC Focus -- April 1995
DOCUMENTARY CHRONICLES RACISM, civil rights GAINS By Michael J. Alva sociology professorHardy Frye isn't grumbling that the documentary, Freedom on My Mind
http://www.ucop.edu/ucophome/commserv/ucfocus/apr95/focus4.html
Documentary Chronicles Racism, Civil Rights Gains UC Focus April 1995 ***************************************************************** DOCUMENTARY CHRONICLES RACISM, CIVIL RIGHTS GAINS By Michael J. Alva Sociology professor Hardy Frye isn't grumbling that the documentary, "Freedom on My Mind," didn't win an Academy Award last month, even though critics predicted it would. "I was a little disappointed. But the most significant thing is that it had been nominated," Frye said. "It means that a lot more people will see it. I think that's important." Frye, a professor of sociology at UC Santa Cruz who is on leave to direct the UC's systemwide Urban Community-School Collaborative, was associate producer of "Freedom on My Mind," which chronicles the Mississippi Voter Registration Project from 1961 to 1964. The documentary focuses on the "Freedom Summer" of 1964 when nearly a thousand young college students, mostly white, were bussed into Mississippi to register poor and disenfranchised blacks. As a 25-year-old Sacramento City College student, Frye participated in the project, which galvanized the nation. It was a key period during the civil rights movement, and ultimately became Frye's academic area of research. "Freedom on My Mind," a Clarity Productions film produced and directed by Berkeley film makers Connie Field and Marilyn Mulford, won the Grand Jury Prize for best documentary at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival last year. It also has been honored as the Best of Northern California at the National Educational Film Festival. Many film critics, including Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, had pegged "Freedom on My Mind" to win the Oscar for best documentary, but the award went to a film about Maya Lin, the architect who designed the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. As one of several advisors for the film, Frye doesn't appear in the film, but helped opened doors for Field and Mulford to interview activists. Besides their interviews, the film makers used historical footage including film supplied by the UCLA Film and Television Archive, still photographs and home movies. Field and Mulford, who are white, thought it was important to have an African American guide them. Completed in early 1994, the documentary took about seven years to produce. Its $900,000 budget was financed with grants from the National Endowments for the Humanities and humanities grants from states including California, New York, Ohio and Mississippi. Frye's participation began in 1989. An Alabama native, Frye joined the civil rights movement in California where he settled after serving in the Army during the 1950s. "Freedom on My Mind" presented Frye the opportunity to continue his own personal activism while providing an audio and visual history for today's youth. "They can see and hear the actual voices of people, see them as young people and see what we had to deal with." Anyone who openly backed the civil rights movement black or white faced the possibility of not only harassment and beatings but death, Frye said. "Remember that even before we went (to Mississippi) . . . three civil rights workers had been killed (in July 1964)," Frye said, referring to the infamous crime that occurred just days before Frye had boarded a bus with the second wave of Freedom Riders. "I don't think anybody turned around. It was a sobering moment. That's for damn sure." The documentary also interested Frye because it gave him an opportunity to accurately portray events that he believes were misrepresented in the movie, "Mississippi Burning." For instance, the movie about the murder of the three civil rights workers and the subsequent investigation portrayed FBI agents as heroes, but many people considered them part of the problem, Frye said. Frye views "Freedom on My Mind" as a way to educate African Americans about what he believes was one of the most significant periods in the history of the civil rights movement and a period which led to activism in other areas. One of the things I insisted upon was to talk about not only our sophisticated analysis, but also how naive we were in some cases about what we were getting involved in, and how our political consciousness grew over the period that we were getting involved a summer, a year and four and five years for some people." Frye doesn't believe, as some political scientists do, that the politics of the 1960s was the politics of youth, only a passing interest on their way to becoming mainstream. "Some of the women who were in Mississippi went into the women's movement, some of the people from Berkeley, like Mario Savio, helped start the free speech movement. Some . . . went into the anti-Vietnam War movement . . . into labor organizing . . . into the black power movement." Frye said his Mississippi experience gave him a new perspective on political battles and the relationship between blacks and whites. "I had been in the military; even though it was integrated, it was segregated. I had lived in South-Central L.A. I was in a black world until 64." In Mississippi, he said, "I worked with guys whose lives were on the line just like me, and they were white. It had a great effect on how I see political allies. A lot of these whites we are still friends." Frye also developed skills he uses today as director of the collaborative program, a systemwide partnership between UC, local school districts and community groups to improve the life for urban students inside and outside the classroom. The training and experience gave him "some idea how you bring people together to make change," he said. "Freedom on My Mind" captures the dynamics of the change that took place in Mississippi as whites and blacks developed mutual trust, as they began organizing voters and as the Mississippi Democratic Freedom Party rose to challenge the Dixiecrats of the Mississippi Democratic Party at the national convention in 1964. What separated the early years of the voter registration drive and that summer of 64 was "white protection," as Frye called it. Escalating violence against blacks led to civil rights groups asking whites to participate in voter registration to give the movement greater visibility. "Most of these white kids were from places like Harvard, Yale, Berkeley, Stanford, most of the major universities, coming to the South for the first time. With these kids came white protection that is, concern from senators, from congressmen, from the news media." Frye's first prospect for voter registration offered a sense that many people had been waiting for a call to arms with votes as the weapons. "I knocked on her door and asked her, would she like to register to vote. She said, I have been waiting for you guys. Let's go whenever you're ready'." The voter registration project and the civil rights movement in Mississippi laid the foundation for the future. By 1990, Mississippi had more elected black officials than any other state. Freedom Summer was the result of a coalition consisting of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, the Congress of Racial Equality, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. "They all came together to put forth this massive push in the summer to crack Mississippi" because of the belief that racism was entrenched there more than any other state, Frye said. In 1961, the first black man who tried to register to vote was shot and killed by a white state legislator who had been a lifelong acquaintance. The legislator was acquitted on grounds of self-defense. When "Freedom on My Mind" was completed, Frye didn't like it, believing that some of the political issues should have received greater attention. But from the audience reaction, "Apparently, I have been proven wrong," Frye said. He noted that he looks at the film differently than most people because he participated in the events portrayed. "After watching the film three or four times, I began to like it. It doesn't hurt to have people telling you it's a great film."

52. About Poverty & Race Research Action Council - PRRAC
Deputy Director for Litigation, Lawyers Committee for civil rights Under Law SeniorFellow, Commonwealth Institute and Research Professor of sociology at Boston
http://www.prrac.org/abtprrac.htm

Race / Racism
Poverty / Welfare Community Organizing Criminal Justice ... PRRAC Home
About PRRAC
PRRAC supports social scientific research into the interrelationship among these racial and economic forces, especially to advance concrete policy and legal changes. When able, PRRAC financially underwrites specific research projects tied directly to ongoing advocacy projects. PRRAC disseminates important research findings to support advocacy and research efforts. PRRAC convenes advocates and researchers to encourage and further their collaboration on race and poverty issues. PRRAC also works in multiple arenas to bring its insights to the attention of government officials, the national media, and the American public."
    PRRAC enhances communications between advocates and social science researchers in order to coordinate strategy in the race and poverty area. PRRAC disseminates ideas and materials, holds conferences and publishes materials focusing on issues of racism and poverty. PRRAC commissions and funds social science research tied to local, state and national advocacy strategies.

53. CNN.com - Black History Month 2002
Together they rallied civil rights demonstrators and organized voter registrationdrives. After graduating with a degree in sociology, she got a job as the
http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2002/black.history/stories/27.everswilliams/
SEARCH CNN.COM Black History Month Home Dr. Mae Jemison Dr. Ben Carson CEO John Thompson Business Ann Fudge FUBU founders Oprah Winfrey Robert Johnson ... Designer Gigi Hunter Politics Rep. Maxine Waters Kofi Annan Condoleezza Rice Rep. Harold Ford ... Kevin Clash More Features Stamp gallery Quiz Resources TIME: Black history
Myrlie Evers-Williams:
civil rights activist
Myrlie Evers-Williams is most famous for being the tireless wife of murdered civil rights leader Medgar Evers. But her tenacious search for her husband's killer and her own determination and leadership make her a civil rights powerhouse in her own right. In 1995, Evers-Williams became chairwoman of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, but her journey really began on June 12, 1963, when she opened her front door in Jackson, Mississippi, to find her husband fatally shot in the back. White supremacist Byron De La Beckwith was charged with the murder but was not convicted after two trials ended in hung juries. Despite this initial defeat, Evers-Williams continued searching for new evidence in the case. In 1994 De La Beckwith was finally convicted of Evers' murder and sentenced to life in prison. After the verdict was read, Evers-Williams "broke into a smile, shouted a cheer and raised a clenched fist to the sky in triumph," the New York Times reported. FULL NAME
Myrlie Evers-Williams BORN
March 17, 1933, Vicksburg, Mississippi

54. Civil Rights Leaders
follow the development of King’s own career and civil rights activities in a makesavailable to researchers in history, political science, sociology, and law
http://www.lib.unc.edu/cdd/crs/socsci/afro/print/leaders.html
Afro-American Studies Collections
Civil Rights Leaders

Bayard Rustin Papers
FBI File on the Reverend Jesse Jackson Fannie Lou Hamer Papers FBI File on Thurgood Marshall ... Transcripts of the Malcolm X Assassination Trial
The Bayard Rustin Papers . [23 microfilm reels] Bethesda, Md.: University Publications of America, 1988.
Davis Microforms Collection Microfilm 1-4474
Another guide to this collection: Davis Z8766.85 .R87 1988 The Bayard Rustin Papers In addition, from 1955 to 1960, Rustin served as chief adviser to King on strategy and issues. Acting as liaison between Randolph and King, in 1957 he organized the Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom, and in 1958 and 1959 he coordinated the National Youth Marches for Integrated Schools, which pressed for full enforcement of the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education

55. University Courses - Sociology
exams) Introduction to the concepts and methods of sociology with an the family; religion;economic order; crime; mental disorders; civil rights; racial, ethnic
http://scs.indiana.edu/univ/univ_courses_subjects/univ_sociology.html
Sociology
S100 Introduction to Sociology

S100w Introduction to Sociology (Online Course)

S163 Social Problems

S163w Social Problems (Online Course)
...
S340w Social Theory (Online Course)

S100 Introduction to Sociology (3 credits)
(10 submissions; 2 exams) Introduction to the concepts and methods of sociology with an emphasis on the understanding of contemporary American society. The Learning Guide introduction for this course is available in Adobe Acrobat format. Course cost: $407.15 (includes $342.15 course tuition)
Required textbooks: $67.00 (Indiana residents: $71.02)
S100w Introduction to Sociology (3 credits)
(10 submissions; 2 exams) Introduction to the concepts and methods of sociology with an emphasis on the understanding of contemporary American society. Note: Requires Microsoft Word. Course cost: $407.15 (includes $342.15 course tuition) Required textbooks: $67.00 (Indiana residents: $71.02) S163 Social Problems (3 credits) (10 submissions; 2 exams) Major social problems in areas such as the family; religion; economic order; crime; mental disorders; civil rights; racial, ethnic, and international tensions. Relation to structure and values of larger society.

56. DEPARTMENT OF GOVERNMENT GOVERNMENT MAJOR
Ethics and Law Puerto Rican Studies Law 322. civil rights and civilLiberties in the Urban Hispanic Community sociology 305. The
http://web.jjay.cuny.edu/~govern/maj.html
Why major in Government?
A Government (political science) degree is an excellent preparation for government service and employment in community agencies and interest groups. Although there is no single appropriate undergraduate preparation for law school, data compiled by the Law School Admissions Council shows that, of those applying to law school, more had earned undergraduate degrees in political science (Government) than in any other major or field. A Government (political science) degree provides an excellent liberal arts undergraduate preparation for advanced degrees in criminal justice, law, political science and public administration.
How can I major in Government?
How can I get more information?
Any full-time member of the Government Department can advise you. Come to Room 3230N.
The Government Major Curriculum
Credits required:
Prerequisite:
Additional information:
Students who enrolled for the first time at the College in February 1993 or thereafter must complete the major in the form presented here. Students who enrolled prior to that date may choose either the form shown here or the earlier version of the major, a copy of which may be obtained at the Office of the Associate Provost.
PART ONE. FOUNDATION COURSES

57. Department Of Sociology, University Of California Berkeley - Faculty
EDELMAN, Lauren Professor, Law sociology of law, organizations,work and employment relations, civil rights. ELLIS, W. Russel, Jr.
http://sociology.berkeley.edu/personnel/oFaculty.asp
Sociology Commencement 2003
Berkeley Journal of Sociology

Producing Public Sociology

Ethnography
...
Visiting Scholars

Affiliated Faculty
For affiliated faculty course offerings, please enter the professor's name in the course listings page EDELMAN, Lauren - Professor, Law
    Sociology of law, organizations, work and employment relations, civil rights
ELLIS, W. Russel, Jr. - Professor Emeritus, Architecture
    Social Issues in Architecture and Urban Design
LINCOLN, James R. - Professor, Business Administration
    Organizations; Japanese society; social networks; quantitative methods
NONET, Philippe - Professor, Law
    Social theory; sociology and philosophy of law
OMI, Michael - Associate Professor, Ethnic Studies
    Race and ethnicity; political movements; and Asian American communities
SHORTELL, Steven - Professor, Public Health
    Health policy and management; organizational behavior
SKOLNICK, Jerome H. - Professor, Law, Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program
    Crime and criminal justice; sociology of law; civil liberties
WILENSKY, Harold - Professor Emeritus, Political Science

58. Chronology Of Civil Rights Struggle
his father, King graduated from Morehouse College with a BA in sociology. Pilgrimagefor Freedom in Washington, DC (September) The civil rights Commission was
http://www.providenceri.com/RI_BlackHeritage/MLK/The-life-and-times-of-Dr-King.h
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF DR. MARTIN LUTHER RING, JR.: A DUAL CHRONOLOGY...OF ONE MAN'S LIFE
AND THE EVOLUTION OF THE
AMERICAN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
Back
(January 15) Martin Luther King, Jr. was born to Alberta Williams King and Rev. Martin Luther King, Sr., in Atlanta King was educated at David T. Howard Elementary School, Atlanta University Laboratory School, and Booker T. Washington High School. An Assistant Preacher with his father, King graduated from Morehouse College with a B. A. in sociology. King graduated from Crozer Theological Seminary in Philadelphia with a "Bachelor of Divinity". King and Coretta Scott were married in Marion, Alabama. (November) After Miss Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to relinquish her seat to a white man, the Montgomery Bus Boycott began.
(December) Yolanda Denise King, the King's first child, was born in Montgomery.
Racial segregation on city bus lines was ruled unconstitutional by a U. S. District Court. (May) King, the first President of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, delivered a speech at the Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom in Washington, D. C. (September) The Civil Rights Commission was created by the United States Congress.
(October) Martin Luther King, III, the King's second child, was born.

59. Powell's Books - Used, New, And Out Of Print
Featured Titles in sociologyGeneral Page 15 of 378 next. Personal Politics TheRoots of Women's Liberation in the civil rights Movement and the New Left by
http://www.powells.com/subsection/SociologyGeneral.15.html
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General
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Browse the aisle by Title by Author by Price See recently arrived used books in this aisle. Featured Titles in Sociology -General: Page 15 of 412 next Used Trade Paper List Price $14.00 American Way of Death Revisited (98 Edition) by Jessica Mitford Publisher Comments "Mitford's funny and unforgiving book is the best memento mori we are likely to get. It should be updated and reissued each decade for our spiritual health."The New York Review of Books Only the scathing wit and searching intelligence of Jessica... read more about this title check for other copies Used Trade Paper List Price $19.95 Creating Mandalas : for Insight, Healing, and Self-expression (91 Edition) by Susanne F. Fincher Publisher Comments The traditional designs known as mandalas were recognized by C. G. Jung as symbolic representations of the Self. This book is a practical guide to mandala drawing for personal growth, stress reduction, and creative expression. Fincher introduces the...

60. American Studies Faculty, Tulane University
of Communications; rhetoric and civil rights, presidential rhetoric Professor of History;civil War and 1986) Associate Professor of sociology; sociology of the
http://www.americanstudies.tulane.edu/faculty.htm
Chair/Director: Teresa Toulouse
Department of English

207 Norman Mayer Building
New Orleans, LA 70118
Phone: 504-865-5160
Fax: 504-862-8958
toulouse@tulane.edu

Toulouse Homepage

Program Description
Required Courses ... American Studies
AMERICAN STUDIES FACULTY

The only core person is the Director, who is chosen from any of the Affiliated Faculty. Affiliated Faculty are drawn from all professorial levels and include over 25 faculty froma variety of departments and programs, including: African and African Diaspora Studies, Anthropology, Architecture, Art, Communications, cultural Studies, English, History, Political Science, Sociology, Theater, and Women's Studies. DIRECTOR TOULOUSE, Teresa (PhD, Harvard Univ., 1980) Associate Professor of English; American literature, colonial and postcolonial literatures, cultural studies ADDERLY, Rosanne (PhD, Univ. of Pennsylvania, 1996) Assistant Professor of History and African-Diaspora Studies; African-American, African Diaspora, Caribbean, slavery AHEARN, Barry (PhD, Johns Hopkins Univ., 1978) Professor of English; American poetry, 20th-century American literature, autobiography

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