The problem of law enforcement in the South, or in a current and not inaccurate phrase, Jim Crow justice, has come to be symbolized by a number of well-publicized killings in recent years. Medgar Evers, head of the NAACP in Jackson, Mississippi, was shot from ambush in the spring of 1963. Lemuel A. Penn, a Washington, D.C., Negro, was killed while driving through Madison County, Georgia, in July 1964. That same summer saw the brutal murder of three civil rights workers, Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman, both white Northerners, and James Earl Chaney, a local Negro, in Philadelphia, Mississippi. In the spring of 1965, Mrs. Viola G. Liuzzo of Detroit was shot to death in Lowndes County, Alabama, on the highway between Selma and Montgomer...
[Abstract] Since the days of Jim Crow, the presence of racism and discrimination in the United Stat...
On August 9, 2014, Michael Brown was shot to death in Ferguson, Missouri, by police officer Darren W...
Capital punishment in this country, and in South Carolina, has its roots in racial subjugation, ster...
"One August night in 1931, on a secluded mountain ridge overlooking Birmingham, Alabama, three young...
Both inside and outside the South, was the law a cause of the high incidence of homicide, or was it ...
Jason Morgan Ward reviews Melanie S. Morrison's Murder on Shades Mountain: The Legal Lynching of Wil...
Few racially motivated crimes have left a more lasting imprint on American memory than the death of ...
The deaths of Black men at the hands of law enforcement officers-or vigilantes, as in the case of Ge...
On March 30, 1959, the U.S. Supreme Court issued two decisions which set the stage for a new era in ...
It was an old-fashioned lynching, carried out with the help of county officials, that came to symbol...
During the summer of 1936, Helen Clevenger, an honor student at New York University, accompanied her...
James Forman Jr., the author of a new book arguing that law enforcement initiatives by black officia...
The “State Line Country” of this book is a rugged area of small farms on the Kentucky-Tennessee bord...
The well-publicized deaths of several African-Americans—Tamir Rice, Philando Castile, and Alton Ster...
On October 15, 1971, Memphis police officers beat Elton Hayes, a seventeen-year old black youth, to ...
[Abstract] Since the days of Jim Crow, the presence of racism and discrimination in the United Stat...
On August 9, 2014, Michael Brown was shot to death in Ferguson, Missouri, by police officer Darren W...
Capital punishment in this country, and in South Carolina, has its roots in racial subjugation, ster...
"One August night in 1931, on a secluded mountain ridge overlooking Birmingham, Alabama, three young...
Both inside and outside the South, was the law a cause of the high incidence of homicide, or was it ...
Jason Morgan Ward reviews Melanie S. Morrison's Murder on Shades Mountain: The Legal Lynching of Wil...
Few racially motivated crimes have left a more lasting imprint on American memory than the death of ...
The deaths of Black men at the hands of law enforcement officers-or vigilantes, as in the case of Ge...
On March 30, 1959, the U.S. Supreme Court issued two decisions which set the stage for a new era in ...
It was an old-fashioned lynching, carried out with the help of county officials, that came to symbol...
During the summer of 1936, Helen Clevenger, an honor student at New York University, accompanied her...
James Forman Jr., the author of a new book arguing that law enforcement initiatives by black officia...
The “State Line Country” of this book is a rugged area of small farms on the Kentucky-Tennessee bord...
The well-publicized deaths of several African-Americans—Tamir Rice, Philando Castile, and Alton Ster...
On October 15, 1971, Memphis police officers beat Elton Hayes, a seventeen-year old black youth, to ...
[Abstract] Since the days of Jim Crow, the presence of racism and discrimination in the United Stat...
On August 9, 2014, Michael Brown was shot to death in Ferguson, Missouri, by police officer Darren W...
Capital punishment in this country, and in South Carolina, has its roots in racial subjugation, ster...