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         Civil Rights Sociology:     more books (100)
  1. If White Kids Die: Memories of a Civil Rights Movement Volunteer by Dick J. Reavis, 2001-03-01
  2. Asian American Women: Issues, Concerns, and Responsive Human and Civil Rights Advocacy by Lora Jo Foo, 2007-06-19
  3. My Soul Looks Back in Wonder: Voices of the Civil Rights Experience (AARP) by Juan Williams, 2005-08-01
  4. Immigration: A Civil Rights Issue for the Americas by Susanne Jonas, 1998-11-01
  5. Black Civil Rights in America (Introductions to History) by Kevern Verney, 2000-08-30
  6. The Spirit and the Shotgun: Armed Resistance and the Struggle for Civil Rights (New Perspectives on the History of the South) by Simon Wendt, 2010-11-14
  7. Understanding Disability: Inclusion, Access, Diversity, and Civil Rights by Paul T. Jaeger, Cynthia Ann Bowman, 2008-10-30
  8. Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and the Civil Rights Struggle of the 1950s and 1960s: A Brief History with Documents (The Bedford Series in History and Culture) by David Howard-Pitney, 2004-02-20
  9. You Must Be from the North: Southern White Women in the Memphis Civil Rights Movement by Kimberly K. Little, 2009-05-07
  10. Sisters in the Struggle : African-American Women in the Civil Rights-Black Power Movement by V.P. Franklin, 2001-08-01
  11. Police Traffic Stops and Racial Profiling: Resolving Management, Labor and Civil Rights Conflicts by James T. O'Reilly, 2002-05
  12. The Civil Rights Movement (Black History) by Stuart A. Kallen, 2001-07
  13. Challenging the Civil Rights Establishment: Profiles of a New Black Vanguard by Joseph G. Conti, Brad Stetson, 1993-06-30
  14. Raymond Pace Alexander: A New Negro Lawyer Fights for Civil Rights in Philadelphia (Margaret Walker Alexander Series in African American Studies) by David A. Canton, 2010-05-11

81. ELibrary.com - Newsday 11-01-1996 Pp A53, 'Is Second Civil Rights Era
eLibrary is the subscription based online library for fun or research. Find out more about securing your guaranteed Free 7day trial with your credit card and retrieve 'eLibrary.com - Newsday 11-01-1996 pp A53, 'Is Second civil rights Era Dying?''
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82. New Stamp To Honor Roy Wilkins For His Civil Rights Activism - 11/10/2000
© 2000 Minnesota Daily, all rights reserved
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New stamp to honor Roy Wilkins for his civil rights activism Seth Woehrle Staff Writer University alumnus Roy Wilkins, who already has a residence hall and an auditorium named in his honor, will have another accolade added in January. The U.S. Postal Service will issue a Roy Wilkins stamp Jan. 24 as part of the Black Heritage Commemorative Stamp Series. Northrop Auditorium will be the first location in the country to issue the stamps. This first series of stamps will have the Minneapolis postmark on them, making them more valuable to collectors. The following day, the stamps will be available across the nation, and will continue to be printed in a run of two hundred million.
The Man Roy Wilkins was born in St. Louis, Mo., on Aug. 30, 1901, and died 80 years later. He was an important figure in the fight for racial equality. "Wilkins had a long and distinguished career in the civil rights movement," said John Wright, a professor in African studies. "That went back to his (early) days in the Minneapolis/St. Paul area and from his days as a student here at the University."

83. Civil Rights H-L
RALPH J. BUNCHE ORAL HISTORY COLLECTION (HL) HALEY, Frank (1933- ) RJB 120 civil rights worker in Philadelphia and Chester, Pennsylvania. (n.d.) RJB 425. civil rights and civil liberties attorney in for peace and civil rights cannot be a basis
http://www.founders.howard.edu/moorland-spingarn/civilh-l.html
RALPH J. BUNCHE ORAL HISTORY COLLECTION (H-L)
HALEY, Frank (1933- ) RJB 120
Civil rights worker in Philadelphia and Chester, Pennsylvania. Member, Young Militants, a group that "polices policemen" in the Black community and during demonstrations to eliminate police brutality. Recalls demonstrations in Chester, and the treatment of protesters by police during arrest and jailing.
Interviewer: Katherine Shannon
Date: January 9, 1968
Format: Transcript, 45 pages; tape not available
Restrictions: Standard
HALEY, Oretha Castle (n.d.) RJB 682
One of the founders and leaders, New Orleans chapter, Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). Currently working with New Orleans chapter Urban League. Describes the conditions that led to the formation of CORE's New Orleans chapter in 1960 and to the later expulsion of the its white members in 1964. Details the re-organized chapter's return to high-profile protest activities, culminating in a Black boycott of the city's renowned Mardi Gras parade.
Interviewer: James M. Mosby Jr.

84. A1-Termpaper 1-800-Termpaper Law And Civil Rights Termpaper Termpapers Term Pape
Custom Work Law civil rights Index. To order a specific paper, clickthe Catalog Number button next to the Paper Title of interest.
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SUBJECT INDEX
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Law: Civil Rights Index
To order a specific paper, click the Catalog Number button next to the Paper Title of interest.
Paper Title
Description of Paper (Year Written) (Nbr Pages) (Nbr Notes/Citations) (Nbr Sources) ($=Price)
Albert S. Burelson and His Effects on the Civil Liberties of Americans
Contends Burelson committed grave misconduct while Postmaster General of the U.S. (1911-1921) as to rules on censorship and denial of mailing rights to left wing publications. Written in 1978, 15 pages, 11 notes, 5 sources, $134.25
The Bakke Case and the Historical Overview
Examines the theory and practice behind affirmative activity programs, centering on the Bakke case and its subsequent effects. Written in 1979, 13 pages, 24 notes, 8 sources, $116.35
Constitutional Rights of Religious Groups
Analyzes the constitutional rights of prosyletic groups, centering on the followers of Sun Myung Moon and their tactics on college campuses. Written in 1979, 7 pages, $62.65
Morgan vs. Virginia

85. Dudziak, M.L.: Cold War Civil Rights: Race And The Image Of American Democracy.
Cold War civil rights Race and the Image of American Democracy. Never beforehas any scholar so directly connected civil rights and the Cold War.
http://pup.princeton.edu/titles/6924.html
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Cold War Civil Rights:
Race and the Image of American Democracy
Mary L. Dudziak
Shopping Cart Reviews Table of Contents In 1958, an African-American handyman named Jimmy Wilson was sentenced to die in Alabama for stealing two dollars. Shocking as this sentence was, it was overturned only after intense international attention and the interference of an embarrassed John Foster Dulles. Soon after the United States' segregated military defeated a racist regime in World War II, American racism was a major concern of U.S. allies, a chief Soviet propaganda theme, and an obstacle to American Cold War goals throughout Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Each lynching harmed foreign relations, and "the Negro problem" became a central issue in every administration from Truman to Johnson. In what may be the best analysis of how international relations affected any domestic issue, Mary Dudziak interprets postwar civil rights as a Cold War feature. She argues that the Cold War helped facilitate key social reforms, including desegregation. Civil rights activists gained tremendous advantage as the government sought to polish its international image. But improving the nation's reputation did not always require real change. This focus on image rather than substancecombined with constraints on McCarthy-era political activism and the triumph of law-and-order rhetoriclimited the nature and extent of progress.

86. Harvard Gazette: Teaching Advocacy And Activism
to powerful lectures by Professor Gary Orfield, codirector of The civil RightsProject, and Prudence Carter, assistant professor of sociology at Harvard
http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2002/07.18/09-civilrights.html
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News, events, features Science/Research Latest scientific findings Profiles The people behind the university Community Harvard and neighbor communities Sports Scores, highlights, upcoming games On Campus Newsmakers, notes, students, police log ... Arts Museums, concerts, theater Calendar Two-week listing of upcoming events
Teaching advocacy and activism:
Summer program makes civil rights not just a part of history, but a pathway into the future
By Beth Potier
Gazette Staff
Brittny-Jade Saunders '03: 'We're so far from equity, and we're so far from a society in which opportunities are open that it's very important people are still willing to dedicate themselves to civil rights.' (Staff photo by Rose Lincoln) Forty years after their forerunners took to the lunch counters and streets of the American South, 21 young activists are putting their own spin on civil rights: by dancing, teaching, praying, and learning. The future leaders are honing their advocacy and activism skills at the second annual Civil Rights Summer (CRS), a fellowship program sponsored by The Civil Rights Project at Harvard, the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, the Leadership Conference Education Fund, and the Citizens' Commission on Civil Rights.

87. I've Got The Light Of Freedom
DESCRIPTION (back to top). This momentous work offers a groundbreakinghistory of the early civil rights movement in the South. Using
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/6343.html
Entire Site Books Journals E-Editions The Press
Charles Payne
I've Got the Light of Freedom
The Organizing Tradition and the Mississippi Freedom Struggle
(A Centennial Book)
Publication Date: May 1995 Subjects: American Studies United States History African American Studies Sociology ... American Studies Rights: World 506 pages Paperback
Available Now Description Awards About the Author
"So valuable in helping us understand the civil rights movement as it gathered national force in the mid-1960s . . . also [a] powerfully written narrative of the local forces that made the movement possible."Michael Kennedy, Boston Globe "An important history of the Civil Rights movement at the grass-roots level. . . . The exellent bibliographic essay is essential reading." Library Journal "I was surprised at how much there is for myself and other movement people to learn about the Mississippi freedom struggle from Charles Payne's book."Bob Moses, SNIC Field Secretary, Mississippi, 1961-1965 "A superb and important book, remarkably astute in its judgments and strikingly sophisticated in its analyses. Impressively original, it is one of the most significant studies of the Black freedom struggle yet published."David J. Garrow, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Bearing the Cross "A compelling story of the black freedom struggle in the Mississippi Delta. Charles Payne has written the definitive study of the civil rights movement in the Delta. Through his superb use of oral history interviews, Payne reveals the courage, passion, humor, and dedication of thousands of black women and men who worked, against overwhelming odds, to take charge of their destiny. This is the most comprehensive and revealing study of organizing on the grass-roots level that we have, and will be invaluable to scholars, students, and activists alike."John Dittmer, author of

88. Civil Rights Movement Resources At Questia - The Online Library
civil rights Movement. Questia has dozens of books and journal articles on thecivil rights Movement. Selected civil rights Movement Resources. CLICK A BOOK!
http://www.questia.com/popularSearches/civil_rights.jsp

89. Civil Rights Videos And Films | FIRST RUN/ICARUS FILMS
Award winning collection of films and videos about civil rights.
http://www.frif.com/subjects/civil_ri.html
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  • Acts of Defiance - Investigates the struggles of the Mohawk against the federal and provincial governments, the army, and the stone throwing rioters.

90. Law, Human And Civil Rights Electronic Journals
Law, Human and civil rights Electronic journals. International Journal of the Sociologyof Law (via ingentaJournals use ATHENS Personal Account off Sussex
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/library/subjects/law_ejournals.shtml
Law, Human and Civil Rights Electronic journals
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American Journal of International Law
From JSTOR: coverage Vol.1, 1907 - Vol.96, no.2, 2002. (For off campus access, go via JSTOR Home page using ATHENS Personal Account.) Antitrust Law and Economics Review
Full text of selected articles from 1967 - 1995 British Journal of Criminology
Full text from Vol.38, no.4, 1998. Cambridge Law Journal
Full text from Vol.57, no.2, 1998. Via Cambridge Journals Online; choose Cambridge Law Journal from the Subscribed Journals option under Browse Journals. You can also register to make use of Personalised features.
Via ScienceDirect which provides full text of journals after 1995. E Law - Murdoch University Electronic Journal of Law
Full text from Vol.1, 1993. European Journal of International Law
(via ingentaJournals: use ATHENS Personal Account off Sussex campus) European Law Journal
(via ingentaJournals: use ATHENS Personal Account off Sussex campus) Florida State University Law Review
Full text from Vol.23, 1995 Howard Journal of Criminal Justice (via ingentaJournals: use ATHENS Personal Account off Sussex campus) Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies Full text of current issue only Industrial Law Journal Full text from Vol.27, issue 4, 1998

91. Book Review: Eyerman, Cultural Trauma
occupied by Union troops during the civil War Rhoda E. HowardHassmann Professor ofSociology McMaster University of African and international human rights, Prof
http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/cjscopy/reviews/trauma.html
Canadian Journal of Sociology Online January - February 2003 Ron Eyerman
Cultural Trauma: Slavery and the Formation of African-American Identity

Cambridge University Press, 2002, 302 pp.
$US 23.00 (paper) ( ), $U.S. 65.00 hardcover (
Ron Eyerman has written an extremely fascinating, intellectually exciting book showing how the cultural trauma of slavery has influenced African-American identity, from the period of slavery itself until the present.
One could read this book merely as very learned account of how African-American cultural expression has evolved, changed, and revolved back to its origins over the generations. Even a reader disagreeing with the premise of collective trauma would find this book fascinating for the history of African-American cultural protest that it presents. Eyerman leads the reader chronologically through the post-Reconstructionist period, through the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and early 30s, through the influence of the early civil rights movements of the 1940s and 50s on such later activists as Martin Luther King. He continues with the rise of both black nationalism and the Nation of Islam. He also vividly shows the continuity in African-American history. For example, A. Philip Randolph, the trade unionist who organized the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters in 1925, influenced a later generation of civil rights activists.
Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann

92. College History Classes Courses American European Civil Rights -
the Vietnam War on the civil rights movement
http://www.ce.columbia.edu/summer/history.cfm

93. African American History Videos | Black History Videos
civil rights History A. Philip Randolph For Jobs and Freedom A portrait ofthe unsung civil rights hero and labor leader At the River I Stand The '68
http://www.newsreel.org/topics/aahist.htm
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Constitutional/Legal History Historiography ... BROWSE BY TITLE (A-Z) See also: DIVERSITY TRAINING THE LIBRARY OF AFRICAN CINEMA MEDIA AND SOCIETY MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS AFRICAN AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES The quintessential video collection on African American life, history, literature and culture. Please select from the History courses on the left or scroll down. Black Migration The Black Press : Soldiers Without Swords The Language You Cry In : From 18th century Sierra Leone to the Gullah people of present-day Georgia. Family Across the Sea : African Americans' links to Africa Goin' to Chicago : The saga of the Black Migration One Shot: the photographs of black American life. Richard Wright : Black Boy Wild Women Don't Have the Blues : The music, the women, the legacy

94. The Sociology Of Race And Ethnicity
(See the National Park Service's We Shall Overcome Historic Places of the CivilRights Movement ) In March of 1995 Mississippi lawmakers finally ratified the
http://www.trinity.edu/mkearl/race.html
R E THNICITY
In 1986, Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone remarked that the average American intellectual standard is lower than the average Japanese standard because of the blacks and Hispanics in the U.S. He has often said that the source of Japan's strength lies in its "racial homogeneity." Eleven years later, University of Texas Law School Professor Lino Graglia triggered a firestorm of criticism for his remarks that "Blacks and Mexican-Americans are not academically competitive with whites in selective institutions. It is the result primarily of cultural effects. They have a culture that seems not to encourage achievement. Failure is not looked upon with disgrace." It has been said that race is the plague of civilization. Even in such supposedly race-blind societies as Israel, the specter of racism raises its head. In the Caribbean islands, social stratification corresponds with shade of skin. In 1977, Andrew Young, at that time the chief U.S. representative to the United Nations, claimed that a race war in South Africa would inevitably precipitate racial conflict in the United States. Some countries, like Great Britain and Australia, eliminate the potential for conflict by simply denying or severely limiting entry. However, American society has always been enriched by its waves of immigrants. John Kennedy observed how Alexis de Tocqueville saw the United States as "a society of immigrants, each of whom had begun life anew, on an equal footing. This was the secret of America: a nation of people with the fresh memory of old traditions who dared to explore new frontiers ..."

95. The Sociology Of Race And Ethnicity
(See the National Park Service's We Shall Overcome Historic Places of the CivilRights Movement. ) In March of 1995 Mississippi lawmakers finally ratified
http://www.trinity.edu/~mkearl/race.html
R E THNICITY
In 1986, Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone remarked that the average American intellectual standard is lower than the average Japanese standard because of the blacks and Hispanics in the U.S. He has often said that the source of Japan's strength lies in its "racial homogeneity." Eleven years later, University of Texas Law School Professor Lino Graglia triggered a firestorm of criticism for his remarks that "Blacks and Mexican-Americans are not academically competitive with whites in selective institutions. It is the result primarily of cultural effects. They have a culture that seems not to encourage achievement. Failure is not looked upon with disgrace." It has been said that race is the plague of civilization. Even in such supposedly race-blind societies as Israel, the specter of racism raises its head. In the Caribbean islands, social stratification corresponds with shade of skin. In 1977, Andrew Young, at that time the chief U.S. representative to the United Nations, claimed that a race war in South Africa would inevitably precipitate racial conflict in the United States. Some countries, like Great Britain and Australia, eliminate the potential for conflict by simply denying or severely limiting entry. However, American society has always been enriched by its waves of immigrants. John Kennedy observed how Alexis de Tocqueville saw the United States as "a society of immigrants, each of whom had begun life anew, on an equal footing. This was the secret of America: a nation of people with the fresh memory of old traditions who dared to explore new frontiers ..."

96. Crossing Border Street
Go. Entire Site. Peter Jan Honigsberg Crossing Border Street A civil RightsMemoir Publication Date June 2000.
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/8815.html
Entire Site Books Journals E-Editions The Press
Peter Jan Honigsberg
Crossing Border Street
A Civil Rights Memoir
Publication Date: June 2000 Subjects: Politics American Studies African Studies African American Studies ... Law Rights: World 192 pages, 6 x 9 inches, 17 b/w photographs Clothbound
Available Now Paperback
Available Now Read the first chapter View the Table of Contents Description About the Author
"Honigsberg makes palpable the tension, fear and courage of both black and white activists. He clearly explains the social, political, and economic currents of the time and reinforces the narrative with over a dozen photographs"Jane S. Drabkin, School Library Journal "In acknowledging how the civil rights movement changed the world and his life, Honigsberg has given the reader a glimpse of the past and a rare, remarkable book." Publishers Weekly "What [Honigsberg] contributes mostly is a behind-the-scenes view of the daily grassroots struggle of people the national audience never heard about but who made all the difference in moving the nation along the road to ending segregation." Library Journal "An affecting story that engagingly evokes the feel and texture of Louisiana at a critical point in time."Lawrence N. Powell, the

97. Help: Research Guides & Class Pages
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