This article examines the development of Massive Resistance, in particular Citizens’ Councils, in Louisiana after the council movement in the South had passed its zenith when being unable to prevent the passage of federal civil rights and voting rights legislation. This article argues that grassroots white supremacist groups in Louisiana faced a winding path of decline and revitalization, and a number of councils proved adaptive to the changing political, social, and economic landscape by devising activist strategies that focused on direct action, white voter registration, and tapping into broader conservative discourses on law and order, welfare, and morality. Similar to questions about a “long civil rights movement,” white supremacist res...
This article argues that framing the Birmingham struggle of 1963 as the critical moment when the sou...
This article explores the political uses of the anti-genocide norm by black freedom activists in the...
By 1969 the nature and terrain of the Black freedom movement had profoundly changed. The nonviolent ...
In the 1960s, the leader of the largest Ku Klux Klan organization in the United States presumed that...
Despite its lack of membership and vague organizational structure, the Southern Christian leadership...
The civil rights movement in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, went beyond a battle between blacks and whites ...
Did white supremacists successfully appeal to a right of resistance in Louisiana in the 1870s? I arg...
At the Riverside Church in New York, April 1967, Martin Luther King, Jr. did not just speak out agai...
This thesis describes the significant events of the Civil Rights Movement from 1960 to 1965, examini...
After the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision, blacks in the South lost most of the rights achieved dur...
This article explores the response of the moderate wing of the civil rights movement to the war in V...
The history of Louisiana from slavery until the Civil Rights Act of 1964 shows that unique influence...
This study examines the ideology of white southern opposition to the civil rights movement in order ...
The article focuses on the segregation in the U.S. and the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 u...
The civil rights movement is a topic that continues to inspire a tremendous amount of scholarly rese...
This article argues that framing the Birmingham struggle of 1963 as the critical moment when the sou...
This article explores the political uses of the anti-genocide norm by black freedom activists in the...
By 1969 the nature and terrain of the Black freedom movement had profoundly changed. The nonviolent ...
In the 1960s, the leader of the largest Ku Klux Klan organization in the United States presumed that...
Despite its lack of membership and vague organizational structure, the Southern Christian leadership...
The civil rights movement in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, went beyond a battle between blacks and whites ...
Did white supremacists successfully appeal to a right of resistance in Louisiana in the 1870s? I arg...
At the Riverside Church in New York, April 1967, Martin Luther King, Jr. did not just speak out agai...
This thesis describes the significant events of the Civil Rights Movement from 1960 to 1965, examini...
After the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision, blacks in the South lost most of the rights achieved dur...
This article explores the response of the moderate wing of the civil rights movement to the war in V...
The history of Louisiana from slavery until the Civil Rights Act of 1964 shows that unique influence...
This study examines the ideology of white southern opposition to the civil rights movement in order ...
The article focuses on the segregation in the U.S. and the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 u...
The civil rights movement is a topic that continues to inspire a tremendous amount of scholarly rese...
This article argues that framing the Birmingham struggle of 1963 as the critical moment when the sou...
This article explores the political uses of the anti-genocide norm by black freedom activists in the...
By 1969 the nature and terrain of the Black freedom movement had profoundly changed. The nonviolent ...