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Michael J. Klarman - From Jim Crow to Civil Rights: The Supreme Court and the Struggle for Racial Equality - 9780195310184 - V9780195310184
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From Jim Crow to Civil Rights: The Supreme Court and the Struggle for Racial Equality

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Description for From Jim Crow to Civil Rights: The Supreme Court and the Struggle for Racial Equality Paperback. Num Pages: 672 pages, 40 halftones. BIC Classification: 1KB; 3JH; 3JJ; HBJK; LAZ; LNDC. Category: (G) General (US: Trade); (U) Tertiary Education (US: College). Dimension: 236 x 158 x 38. Weight in Grams: 1002.
Do Supreme Court decisions matter? In 1896 the United States Supreme Court ruled in Plessy v. Ferguson that railroad segregation laws were permissible under the Fourteenth Amendment. In 1954 the Court's decision in Brown v. the Board of Education held that the same constitutional provision invalidated statutes segregating public schools How great an impact did judicial rulings such as Plessy and Brown have? How much did such Court decisions influence the larger world of race relations? In From Jim Crow to Civil Rights, Michael J. Klarman examines the social and political impact of the Supreme Court's decisions involving race relations from Plessy, the Progressive Era, and the Interwar Period to World Wars I and II, Brown and the Civil Rights Movement. He explores the wide variety of consequences that Brown may have had--raising the salience of race issues, educating opinion, mobilizing supporters, energizing opponents of racial change. He concludes that Brown was ultimately more important for mobilizing southern white opposition to racial change than for encouraging direct-action protest. The decision created concrete occasions for violent confrontation--court ordered school desegregation and radicalized southern politics, leading to the election of politicians who calculated that violent suppression of civil rights demonstrations would win votes. It was such violence--vividly captured on television--that ultimately transformed northern opinion on race, leading to the enactment of landmark civil rights legislation in the mid 1960s. A fascinating investigation of the Supreme Court's rulings on race, From Jim Crow to Civil Rights, spells out in exhaustive detail the political and social context against which the Supreme Court Justices operate and the consequences of those decisions on the civil rights movement and beyond.

Product Details

Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc United States
Number of pages
672
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2008
Condition
New
Weight
997g
Number of Pages
672
Place of Publication
New York, United States
ISBN
9780195310184
SKU
V9780195310184
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-22

About Michael J. Klarman
Michael J. Klarman is James Monroe Professor of Law and Professor of History at the University of Virginia.

Reviews for From Jim Crow to Civil Rights: The Supreme Court and the Struggle for Racial Equality
Michael J. Klarman's monumental book
undertaking a sweeping exploration of the causes and consequences of all of the Supreme Court's race decisions from Plessy v. Ferguson to Brown vs. Board of Educationis likely to become the definitive study of the Supreme Court and race in the first half of the twentieth century. As a narrative history of the Court's actions on the broad array of constitutional issues relevant to racial equalityfrom criminal procedure to voting rights to desegregationthe book is an invaluable resource.Reviews in American History
Klarman's scholarly text is unique in that it encompasses not only the decision itself, but also the events before and after.
Elaine Cassel, author of The War on Civil Liberties
Of all of the many books published recently on the occasion of Brown's fiftieth anniversary, the most ambitious is Michael J. Klarman's comprehensive history of federal race-relations law from the late nineteenth century until the early 1960s...Klarman's study is a major achievement. It bestows upon its fortunate readers prodigious research, nuanced judgment, and intellectual independence.
Randall Kennedy, The New Republic
Magisterial...
The New York Review of Books
A highly accessible analysis of the interplay between the Supreme Court and U.S. race relations.
Booklist
This luminous study explores the relationship between the Supreme Court and the quest for racial justice.... a sweeping, erudite, and powerfully argued book that, despite its heft, is unfailingly interesting.
Wilson Quarterly
Michael Klarman's authoritative account of constitutional law concerning race
from the late 19th century through the 1960sis brilliant, both as legal interpretation and as social and political history. While the book deals with a wide range of racially charged issuescriminal procedure, peonage, transportation, residential segregation, and voting rightsit focuses with especially keen insights on the Brown v. Board of Education case of 1954. From Jim Crow to Civil Rights is a magisterial accomplishment.James T. Patterson, Bancroft Prize-winning author of Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945-1974 (Oxford, 1996)
Michael Klarman's exhaustively researched study is essential reading for anyone interested in civil rights, the Supreme Court, and constitutional law. Accessible to ordinary readers, students, and scholars, Klarman's book presents a challenging argument that places the Supreme Court's civil rights decisions in their social and political context, and deflates overstated claims for the importance of the Supreme Court's work while identifying carefully the precise contributions the Court made to race relations policy from 1896 through the 1960s.
Mark Tushnet, author of Taking the Constitution Away from the Courts
Pulling together a decade of truly magnificent scholarship, this extraordinary book bids fair to be the definitive legal history of perhaps the most important legal issue of the twentieth century. There is no one from whom I have learned more
and whom I enjoy reading morethan Michael Klarman. This is legal history at its best, and on a panoramic canvas.Akhil Reed Amar, author of The Bill of Rights: Creation and Reconstruction
From Jim Crow to Civil Rights is a bold, carefully crafted, deeply researched, forcefully argued, lucidly written history of law and legal-change strategies in the civil rights movement from the 1880s to the 1960s, and a brilliant case study in the power and limits of law as a motor of social change. Among the hundreds of recent books on the history of civil rights and race relations, Klarman's is one of the most original, provocative, and illuminating, with fresh evidence and fresh insights on practically every page.
Robert W. Gordon, Chancellor Kent Professor of Law and Legal History, Yale University
Michael J. Klarman has written an exhaustive
and according to many reviewers a definitiveaccount of the United States Supreme Court's twentieth-century jurisprudence of race.Law and History Review

Goodreads reviews for From Jim Crow to Civil Rights: The Supreme Court and the Struggle for Racial Equality


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