The story of school desegregation in America is so pivotal to our understanding of the Civil Rights Movement that divergent interpretations become more than scholarly endeavors; they rattle our faith in social change. The story about desegregation traditionally begins with Brown v. Board of Education. When Michael Klarman first suggested in 1994 that Brownmay have contributed less to the Civil Rights Movement than conventionally believed, legal historians pilloried his scholarship. Brown had attained a position so politically sacrosanct that any recalibration of its import or influence threatened to fundamentally undermine the accepted history of the Civil Rights Movement itself. Although Klarman\u27s theory is no longer as controversial ...