The desegregation of the public schools in Virginia began on February 2, 1959, and continued through early in the 1970s when the state government\u27s attempts to resist desegregation ended. During this period, African Americans in Virginia pushed for desegregation primarily by filing lawsuits in federal courts throughout Virginia
This thesis examines the jurisprudential and political development of desegregation in South Caroli...
Thompson became the first black students to attend a segregated white school in Virginia when they e...
The retrenchment of court-ordered school desegregation has been more variable and incomplete than of...
This report discusses desegregation in public schools after the 1954 "Brown v. Board of Education" d...
It is now more that fourteen years since the Supreme Court rejected gradual and voluntary transfers ...
This paper examines the closure of public schools in Prince Edward County, Virginia from 1959-1964 i...
Virginia\u27s Pupil Placement Board was the most enduring vestige of the state\u27s massive resista...
Professor Tobias chronicles the social, political, and legal dimensions of Virginia\u27s slow path t...
Notes pertaining to Florida and Virginia legal cases involving staff desegregation in public schools...
Public school segregation between white and black students in Southern states increased slightly in ...
School desegregation is not dead. It lives quietly in what used to be the Confederate South. Notwith...
Fourteen years after the Supreme Court\u27s 1954 ruling in the school segregation cases, school segr...
The purpose of this study was to describe and interpret the desegregation process in a southern city...
American public schools were segregated racially in most of the nation for more than a century after...
In the twentieth-century struggle for racial equality, there was perhaps no setting more fraught and...
This thesis examines the jurisprudential and political development of desegregation in South Caroli...
Thompson became the first black students to attend a segregated white school in Virginia when they e...
The retrenchment of court-ordered school desegregation has been more variable and incomplete than of...
This report discusses desegregation in public schools after the 1954 "Brown v. Board of Education" d...
It is now more that fourteen years since the Supreme Court rejected gradual and voluntary transfers ...
This paper examines the closure of public schools in Prince Edward County, Virginia from 1959-1964 i...
Virginia\u27s Pupil Placement Board was the most enduring vestige of the state\u27s massive resista...
Professor Tobias chronicles the social, political, and legal dimensions of Virginia\u27s slow path t...
Notes pertaining to Florida and Virginia legal cases involving staff desegregation in public schools...
Public school segregation between white and black students in Southern states increased slightly in ...
School desegregation is not dead. It lives quietly in what used to be the Confederate South. Notwith...
Fourteen years after the Supreme Court\u27s 1954 ruling in the school segregation cases, school segr...
The purpose of this study was to describe and interpret the desegregation process in a southern city...
American public schools were segregated racially in most of the nation for more than a century after...
In the twentieth-century struggle for racial equality, there was perhaps no setting more fraught and...
This thesis examines the jurisprudential and political development of desegregation in South Caroli...
Thompson became the first black students to attend a segregated white school in Virginia when they e...
The retrenchment of court-ordered school desegregation has been more variable and incomplete than of...