Affirmative Action at the Crossroads: Race and the Future of Black Progress.
The Western Journal of Black Studies 2003, Spring, 27, 1
-
- $5.99
-
- $5.99
Publisher Description
Introduction The modern struggle to expand American democracy was short-lived. It lasted from the beginning of black protest in the post-World War 11 era, specifically bus boycotts in Baton Rouge in 1953 and Montgomery in 1955 (Morris 1984), to the early 1970's, when Richard Nixon laid the foundation for the most far-reaching form of contemporary affirmative action. His administration:
More Books Like This
On Robert L. Allen's Black Awakening in Capitalist America: "the Black Middle Class, Forty Years After" (Critical Essay)
2010
Systemic Racism 101
2022
Civil Rights Movement of the USA in the 1960s
2011
Upon these Shores
2013
Encyclopedia of African-American Politics, Third Edition
2021
Racial Formation in the United States
2014
More Books by The Western Journal of Black Studies
So Long a Letter: Finding Self and Independence in Africa.
2004
Slavery of the Mind: Carter G. Woodson and Jacob H. Carruthers--Intergenerational Discourse on African Education and Social Change.
2005
"Their Souls Made Them Whole": Negro Spirituals and Lessons in Healing and Atonement.
2007
Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA): with Special Reference to the "Lost" Parade in Columbus, Ohio, September 25, 1923.
2004
The Spread of Christianity and Islam in Africa: A Survey and Analysis of the Numbers and Percentages of Christians, Muslims and Those Who Practice Indigenous Religions (Author Abstract)
2005
Black Women's Intellectual Traditions: Speaking Their Minds
2008