13 results on '"Civil rights--United States"'
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2. Reminiscences of Tom Lewis, 1986
- Subjects
Artists ,Civil rights workers ,Social problems in art ,Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Protest movements ,Imprisonment ,Civil rights--United States - Abstract
Catholic upbringing; early interest in art; military service; experiences in Europe, 1960; involvement with civil rights movement and Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) in Baltimore; concern over Vietnam conflict and personal involvement; relationship with Philip Berrigan; protests involving destruction of draft records; trial and imprisonment; interactions of art, religion, and morality
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Reminiscences of Victor Rabinowitz, 1990
- Subjects
Lawyers ,Constitutional law ,International law ,Internal security--United States ,Labor unions and communism ,Labor laws and legislation ,Practice of law ,Civil rights--United States - Abstract
Family background, education; early legal work for trade unions, New York, N.Y.; American Labor Party, 1936; Boudin, Cohn and Glickstein, 1938-42; association with Communist-influenced unions, national and state labor boards; foundation of own firm, 1942; effects of Taft-Hartley Act, internal security investigations, American Communications Association vs Douds, Steve Nelson case; discussion of Judith Coplon and Rosenberg cases; Teachers Union, New York, N.Y., and Board of Education; Jimmy Hoffa; representing Castro government from 1960
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Reminiscences of David White, 1986
- Subjects
Hospitals--Employees ,Internal security--United States ,Labor unions--Officials and employees ,Civil rights--United States - Abstract
Family background, childhood in Alexandria, VA and Jersey City, NJ; father's involvement with radical and black national politics; work with the Communist Party in New Jersey; problems during the McCarthy era; attendance at School of Marxist Studies, New York; work as a practical nurse; participation and leadership in District 1199 National Hospital and Health Care Employee's Union: 1969 Charleston, SC hospital strike, hospital organizing in New York, NY; controversies in the Hospital Workers Union in the late 1970s and early 1980s; impressions of Doris Turner and Leon Davis
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Oral history interview with Bayard Rustin, 1987
- Subjects
Civil rights workers ,African Americans--Social conditions ,African American labor union members ,African Americans--Civil rights ,African Americans--Segregation ,Prison discipline ,Civil rights--United States - Abstract
Childhood & World War I period, Pennsylvania; education, Wilberforce University, Teachers College, City College of New York; discrimination within trade union movement; black nationalism; Fellowship of Reconciliation, World War II; experiences in prison, 1943-45; penal reform; Congress of Racial Equality protests, Freedom Ride; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; rivalry between Martin Luther King Jr. and Roy Watkins; A. Philip Randolph and the labor movement; Montogomery bus protest; work with Martin Luther King in organization of Southern Christian Leadership Conference; recollections of Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee; black protests at National Democratic Convention, 1960; A.P. Randolph and the American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO); March on Washington, 1963; Martin Luther King's assasination; genesis of A.P. Randolph Institute; improving employment situation of blacks; Voting Rights Act; social decline in America; South African anti-apartheid movement; communism and factionism in South African government and tribal groups; views on divestment, disinvestment, Reagan administration policies on South Africa; 1987 elections in South Africa. Impressions of: A. Philip Randolph, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Adam Clayton Powell Jr
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Reminiscences of Clifford Judkins Durr, 1974
- Subjects
Lawyers ,New Deal, 1933-1939 ,Internal security--United States ,Broadcasting policy ,Practice of law ,Civil rights--United States - Abstract
Family history and Southern tradition; legal practice; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Government Reorganization Act; Defense Plant corporation; development programs; Federal Communications Commission; Communication Act of 1934; House Committee on Un-American Activities; FBI loyalty programs; broadcast license renewal considerations; academic freedom issue; Montgomery civil rights practice; impressions of Jesse Jones, Hugo Black, Aubrey Williams, others in New Deal Washington
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Oral history interview with David Gilbert, 1985
- Subjects
Social history--1960-1970 ,Revolutionaries ,African American student movements ,Revolutions ,Students ,Student movements ,Civil rights--United States ,Radicalism - Abstract
Origins of political consciousness in suburbs of Boston; early reaction to civil rights struggle and conflict in Vietnam; reactions to social milieu of New York in general and Columbia University in particular; involvement with Congress of Racial Equality, Students for a Democratic Society and other student groups while at Columbia; extended discussion of experiences leading to transition from pacifist to agent of violent revolution; evolution, interaction, and critique of various student activist organizations; 1968 strike at Columbia; experience as member of Weather Underground revolutionary group; lengthy analysis of revolutionary theory
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Oral history interview with Norman Mattoon Thomas, 1965
- Subjects
Politicians ,Journalism ,Civil rights--United States - Abstract
Impressions of United States Presidents, 1912-65; activities in support of socialist and labor organizations; newspaper career; early political campaigns; work for civil liberties: freedom of speech in Jersey City, sharecropper protection, defense of Japanese-Americans during World War II
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Reminiscences of Algernon D. Black, 1978
- Subjects
Internal security ,Civil rights workers ,African Americans--Social conditions ,Educators ,Housing ,African Americans--Civil rights ,Housing policy ,Ethical culture movement ,African Americans--Segregation ,Social service ,Civil rights--United States - Abstract
Immigrant background, Ethical Culture School, Harvard; early interest in civil liberties; Roger N. Baldwin; settlement house work, 1926-1933; work with West Virginia mining families, 1933; teacher and leader at Ethical Culture from 1933; co-chairman, city-wide Committee on Harlem, 1941-1947; job opportunities for blacks; state committee on fair housing, 1949; chairman of board of National Committee on Discrimination in Housing, 1950-1967; black militancy in late 1960s; chairman of Civilian Complaint Review Board of Police Department, New York City, 1966; encampments for citizenship from 1939; writing and broadcasting on ethical issues; internal security investigations
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. When the Marching Stopped : The Politics of Civil Rights Regulatory Agencies
- Author
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Walton, Hanes and Walton, Hanes
- Subjects
- African Americans--Civil rights, Civil rights--United States, Administrative agencies--United States, Executive departments--United States
- Abstract
This book takes the “next step” in the study of the civil rights movement in the United States. To date, the vast majority of books on the civil rights movement have analyzed either the origins and philosophies, or the strategies and tactics of the movement. When the Marching Stopped is the first comprehensive and systematic study of the various civil rights regulatory agencies created under Titles VI and VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The development of these agencies and the subsequent attainment of regulatory power is certainly one of the most significant achievements of the movement.Walton begins with the creation of the regulatory agencies in 1964 under President Johnson, and continues to describe and evaluate them through the Reagan presidency, exploring the creation, structuring, staffing, financing, and attainments of these agencies. The book also compares the work of these “new” civil rights regulatory agencies with earlier efforts ranging from Reconstruction to the late 1930s and early 1940s. An introduction by Mary Frances Berry adds important insights to Walton's monumental efforts.Hanes Walton, Jr. is the Fuller E. Callaway Professor of Political Science at Savannah State College.
- Published
- 1988
11. Moral Rights in the Workplace
- Author
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Ezorsky, Gertrude, Nickel, James W., Ezorsky, Gertrude, and Nickel, James W.
- Subjects
- Quality of work life--United States, Civil rights--United States, Industrial relations--United States
- Abstract
This book focuses on the moral problems that arise for people who labor in ordinary places -- factories, schools, mines, stores, and farms. Moral Rights in the Workplace examines problems of freedom and coercion that develop on the job, issues of the right to meaningful work, occupational health and safety, whistleblowing, the right to union organization, unemployment, and the flight of factories, the rights of health care workers, and workers'self-management. Issues of employment discrimination such as comparable worth, seniority, affirmative action, and worksharing that have been given scant attention in other books are also discussed.Gertrude Ezorsky is Professor of Philosophy at Brooklyn College of The City University of New York. She is the author of Philosophical Perspectives on Punishment, also published by SUNY Press.
- Published
- 1987
12. Constitutionalism and Rights
- Author
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Bryner, Gary C., Reynolds, Noel B., Bryner, Gary C., and Reynolds, Noel B.
- Subjects
- Civil rights--United States, Constitutional law--United States
- Abstract
Constitutionalism and Rights explores the ambivalent relationship between the American tradition of constitutionalism and the notions of rights that have emerged over the last three centuries. The six essays focus systematically on selected tensions between these two fundamental strands in the American tradition of liberty and self-government. Discussed are: ideas of rights and constitutionalism generally; mechanisms and procedures necessary to assure rights in a large bureaucratic state; rights as expressed in public welfare programs; innovations employed by the eighteenth-century Framers to achieve limited government as a means to securing fair and equal individual freedom; the dependence of rights on institutional devices and the rule of law; the need for public virtue (balancing individual rights with self-sacrifice for the common good) if the American constitutional system is to survive; and the dangers of individualism and individual rights posed by modern liberalism.The essayists are prominent scholars representing the disciplines of political science, government, and law. They all state their confidence in the American constitutional system, but they also voice doubts about the future if problems are not redressed. The editors conclude their introduction by expressing hope that this volume “will clarify some important issues and help us remember essential lessons of the past, as we continue in this great public conversation.”Constitutionalism and Rights is the first of a three-volume series examining significant features of the Constitution. The series, inspired by the bicentennial of that great achievement, consists of essays presented by scholars at three conferences on the Constitution held at Brigham Young University in 1985, 1986, and 1987, and several additional essays written especially for these volumes.Gary C. Bryner is an assistant professor of political science at Brigham Young University. Noel B. Reynolds is a professor of political science at Brigham Young University.
- Published
- 1987
13. Bill of Rights, The : A Bicentennial Assessment
- Author
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Bryner, Gary C., Sorensen, A. Don, Bryner, Gary C., and Sorensen, A. Don
- Subjects
- United States. 1st-10th Amendments. Constitution, Civil rights--United States
- Abstract
This book explores the state of rights in America, examines their roots, assesses their effectiveness, discusses their future, and considers how the experience of the U.S. in defining and securing rights can serve as an important source of ideas for other countries. Written by philosophers, legal scholars, and political scientists, the essays contained here consider how well constitutional rights have accomplished their purpose of securing basic liberties over the past 200 years and how well suited they are to protect our individual rights in the future, perhaps the next 200 years.At Brigham Young University's Political Science Department, Gary C. Bryner is Associate Professor. Bryner has co-authored Constitutionalism and Rights and co-edited The Constitution and the Regulation of Society also published by SUNY Press. At Brigham Young University's Political Science Department, A. Don Sorensen is Professor.
- Published
- 1993
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