Home
About Us
Contact Us
Help
Jobs
News
Site Index
OUP Worldwide
Advanced Search
My Account
My Wish List
Sign In/Register
View Basket
Email this to a Friend
Printer-Friendly View
Basket: 0 items | £0.00
You are here:
Home
>
Academic, Professional, & General
>
Politics
>
Political Control & Freedoms
>
Human Rights
>
Civil Rights & Citizenship
>
Brown v. Board of Education
and the Civil Rights Movement
View Larger
Related Categories
Social Discrimination
Ethnic Studies
Legal History
Brown v. Board of Education
and the Civil Rights Movement
Reading line: Abridged Edition of From Jim Crow to Civil Rights: The Supreme Court and the Struggle for Racial Equality
Michael J. Klarman
OUP USA
296 pages | 11 halftones | 152x236mm
978-0-19-530746-7 | Hardback | 16 August 2007
Also available as:
Paperback
Price:
£68.00
This item is printed to order. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
Add to Wish List
A monumental work of history, now available in an abridged, paperback edition, ideal for students and general readers
A splendid account of the Supreme Court's rulings on race in the first half of the twentieth century,
From Jim Crow To Civil Rights
earned rave reviews and won the Bancroft Prize for History in 2005. Now, in this marvelously abridged, paperback edition, Michael J. Klarman has compressed his acclaimed study into tight focus around one major case—
Brown v. Board of Education
—making the path-breaking arguments of his original work accessible to a broader audience of general readers and students.
In this revised and condensed edition, Klarman illuminates the impact of the momentous
Brown v. Board of Education
ruling. He offers a richer, more complex understanding of this pivotal decision, going behind the scenes to examine the justices' deliberations and reconstruct why they found the case so difficult to decide. He recaps his famous backlash thesis, arguing that
Brown
was more important for mobilizing southern white opposition to change than for encouraging civil rights protest, and that it was only the resulting violence that transformed northern opinion and led to the landmark legislation of the 1960s. Klarman also sheds light on broader questions such as how judges decide cases; how much they are influenced by legal, political, and personal considerations; the relationship between Supreme Court decisions and social change; and finally, how much Court decisions simply reflect societal values and how much they shape those values.
Brown v. Board of Education
was one of the most important decisions in the history of the U.S. Supreme Court. Klarman's brilliant analysis of this landmark case illuminates the course of American race relations as it highlights the relationship between law and social reform.
Acclaim for
From Jim Crow to Civil Rights:
"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 sweeping, erudite, and powerfully argued book...unfailingly interesting."
—
Wilson Quarterly
Michael J. Klarman
, James Monroe Professor of Law and Professor of History, University of Virginia
The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
Share
Subscribe to RSS feeds
About Us
|
Contact Us
|
Help
|
Jobs
|
News
|
Site Index
|
OUP Worldwide
Email this to a Friend
|
Printer-Friendly View
|
Accessibility
Copyright © Oxford University Press 2013
|
Privacy Policy
|
Legal Notice
|
Cookie Policy