In The Sit-Ins: Protest and Legal Change in the Civil Rights Era, Christopher W. Schmidt offers a new account of the crucial civil rights protest inspired by the first 'sit-in' by four college students in Greensboro, North Carolina, in 1960. Focusing on the legal issues and constitutional challenges posed by the sit-in movement, the book is a valuable and accessible tool for students and teachers of US and African American history and a reminder of the power of such gestures towards freedom, writes Eraldo S. Santos
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The widespread antipathy to Hart\u27s description of international law as a simple or primitive soci...
This thesis is a political history of the emergence and evolution of selected radical, left, student...
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In Value, Conflict, and Order: Berlin, Hampshire, Williams, and the Realist Revival in Political The...
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Does protest work? And is it more effective when it takes places in countries ruled by repressive re...
Sometimes secrecy in law is required to protect vulnerable witnesses or suppress sensitive evidence....
This article is the foreword to Dr Paul Harpur's 'Discrimination, Copyright and Equality: Law Openin...
In Rebel Law: Insurgents, Courts and Justice in Modern Conflict, Frank Ledwidge explores the role of...
In Constitutional Idolatry and Democracy: Challenging the Infatuation with Writtenness, Brian Christ...
In her award-winning memoir Free, Lea Ypi reflects on the paradoxes of freedom through her recollect...
This article explores legal consciousness in contemporary British theatre. It is concerned with the ...
Last week, a leaked draft Supreme Court opinion showed that the Court is likely to overturn Roe v. W...
In Capitalism’s Conscience: 200 Years of the Guardian, editor Des Freedman brings together contribut...
Brexit is as big and dangerous a mistake as that of appeasement in the 1930s. So argues Cato the You...
The widespread antipathy to Hart\u27s description of international law as a simple or primitive soci...
This thesis is a political history of the emergence and evolution of selected radical, left, student...
In Complaint!, Sara Ahmed follows the institutional life of complaints within the university, explor...
In Value, Conflict, and Order: Berlin, Hampshire, Williams, and the Realist Revival in Political The...
In The End of Aspiration?, Duncan Exley reflects on the current social mobility crisis facing the UK...
Does protest work? And is it more effective when it takes places in countries ruled by repressive re...
Sometimes secrecy in law is required to protect vulnerable witnesses or suppress sensitive evidence....
This article is the foreword to Dr Paul Harpur's 'Discrimination, Copyright and Equality: Law Openin...