The publication of this Symposium in 1978 marks the tenth anniversary of the final publication of the Race Relations Law Reporter. The timing of the Symposium is particularly appropriate for another reason as well. In 1968, the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorder, commonly known as the Kerner Commission,issued a report that had been requested by President Lyndon B.Johnson in July 1967. The Commission, which was to investigate the underlying causes of the riots that plagued America\u27s larger cities during the 1960\u27s, offered the pessimistic conclusion that Our Nation is moving toward two societies, one black, one white-separate and unequal. In the face of this bleak prediction, the Commission issued a voluminous set of reco...
The almost twenty years that followed Brown showed real progress toward a color-blind society. That ...
Welcome to all of you to the second of our Symposia. This is the fortieth year of the Civil Rights D...
The pioneering African-American historian Rayford Logan called the early years of the Progressive er...
This Symposium honors both Professor Theodore A. Smedley and the publication he served as director, ...
Seldom, if ever, have the power and the purposes of legislation been rendered so impotent.... All th...
Future chroniclers of the struggle for racial justice in the United States may note with some perple...
On October 11-12, 1978, Judge A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr.\u27 delivered the Notre Dame Law School\u27s...
By focusing on a number of the CRA\u27s key titles - without belittling the act\u27s importance to L...
From the Introduction: This report adheres as much as possible to the form and structure of the fir...
In 1954, fifty-eight years after the Plessy v. Ferguson decision, the Supreme Court was afforded ano...
This issue explores various topics relating to the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The articles in this is...
Ted Smedley had been a member of the faculty at Washington and Lee for eighteen years when he accept...
In mid-1963, at hearings\u27 on what was to become the Civil Rights Act of 1964, I expressed my regr...
The United States Supreme Court\u27s landmark decision in Runyon v. McCrary interpreted section one ...
On March 1, 1968, the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders made public its findings conce...
The almost twenty years that followed Brown showed real progress toward a color-blind society. That ...
Welcome to all of you to the second of our Symposia. This is the fortieth year of the Civil Rights D...
The pioneering African-American historian Rayford Logan called the early years of the Progressive er...
This Symposium honors both Professor Theodore A. Smedley and the publication he served as director, ...
Seldom, if ever, have the power and the purposes of legislation been rendered so impotent.... All th...
Future chroniclers of the struggle for racial justice in the United States may note with some perple...
On October 11-12, 1978, Judge A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr.\u27 delivered the Notre Dame Law School\u27s...
By focusing on a number of the CRA\u27s key titles - without belittling the act\u27s importance to L...
From the Introduction: This report adheres as much as possible to the form and structure of the fir...
In 1954, fifty-eight years after the Plessy v. Ferguson decision, the Supreme Court was afforded ano...
This issue explores various topics relating to the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The articles in this is...
Ted Smedley had been a member of the faculty at Washington and Lee for eighteen years when he accept...
In mid-1963, at hearings\u27 on what was to become the Civil Rights Act of 1964, I expressed my regr...
The United States Supreme Court\u27s landmark decision in Runyon v. McCrary interpreted section one ...
On March 1, 1968, the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders made public its findings conce...
The almost twenty years that followed Brown showed real progress toward a color-blind society. That ...
Welcome to all of you to the second of our Symposia. This is the fortieth year of the Civil Rights D...
The pioneering African-American historian Rayford Logan called the early years of the Progressive er...