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El. knyga: Voices of Civil Rights Lawyers: Reflections from the Deep South, 1964-1980

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  • Formatas: 440 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Jun-2017
  • Leidėjas: University Press of Florida
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780813059693
  • Formatas: 440 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Jun-2017
  • Leidėjas: University Press of Florida
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780813059693

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Choice Outstanding Academic Title While bus boycotts, sit-ins, and other acts of civil disobedience were the engine of the civil rights movement, the law provided context for these events. Lawyers played a key role amid profound political and social upheavals, vindicating clients and together challenging white supremacy. Here, in their own voices, twenty-six lawyers reveal the abuses they endured and the barriers they broke as they fought for civil rights.These eyewitness accounts provide unique windows into some of the most dramatic moments in civil rights history--the 1965 Selma March, the first civil judgment against the Ku Klux Klan, the creation of ballot access for African Americans in Alabama, and the 1968 Democratic Convention. The narratives depict attorney-client relationships extraordinary in their mutual trust and commitment to risk-taking. White and black, male and female, northern- and southern-born, these recruits in the battle for freedom helped shape a critical chapter of American history.Contributors: Henry M. Aronson | Larry Aschenbrenner | Fred Banks | Reber Boult | John C. Brittain | Armand Derfner | Jack Drake | Malcolm ("Mac") Farmer | William Ferguson | Fred D. Gray | Jim Lewis | Elliott Lichtman | Barbara Schechter Lipman | David Lipman | Don H. Marmaduke | John L. Maxey | Laughlin McDonald | Larry Menefee | Dennis Roberts | Solomon Seay | Norman Siegel | Constance "Connie" Slaughter-Harvey | Richard Sobol, Sebastopol | Richard H. Tuttle

While bus boycotts, sit-ins, and other acts of civil disobedience were the engine of the civil rights movement, the law was a primary context. Lawyers played a key role amid profound social upheavals, and the twenty-six contributors to this volume reveal what it was like to be a southern civil rights lawyer in this era.
List of Figures xi
Foreword xiii
Marian Wright Edelman
Acknowledgments xvii
List of Abbreviations xix
Editor's Note xxi
Introduction 1(6)
Part
1. How Civil Rights Lawyers Emerged
7(62)
1 Children Of The South
9(28)
The Making of a Lawyer
9(8)
Fred Gray
How I Became a Civil Rights Lawyer
17(10)
Barbara Phillips
From Gardendale, Alabama
27(3)
Jack Drake
Growing Up in Winnsboro, South Carolina
30(4)
Laughlin McDonald
Growing Up in Bama
34(3)
Larry Menefee
2 Children Of The North
37(32)
Growing Up in the Shadow of the Holocaust
37(5)
Armand Derfner
Growing Up on the Gold Coast
42(4)
John C. Brittain
Race Consciousness
46(8)
David Lipman
Why Did I Go?
54(2)
Mac Farmer
Growing Up in Washington, D.C.
56(15)
Kent Spriggs
Part
2. The Context Of Civil Rights Litigation
69(178)
3 Big Events
71(38)
Selma Once More: The 1965 Selma March
71(6)
Fred Gray
The First Damages Judgment against the KKK
77(8)
Larry Aschenbrenner
The 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago: White Mississippi Delegation Barred
85(4)
Larry Aschenbrenner
Armand Derfner
Senator McClellan Seeks to Prove SNCC Is Communist
89(5)
Reber Boult
Miscegenation Comes to Mississippi
94(2)
Armand Derfner
The Full Court Press for Voting Rights in Alabama
96(8)
Norman Siegel
Mississippi Seeks to Ban the Civil Rights Lawyers
104(5)
Larry Aschenbrenner
4 The Tenor Of The Times
109(58)
Mass Meetings, Demonstrations, and Boycotts
109(11)
Larry Aschenbrenner
Being Married to a Civil Rights Lawyer
120(8)
Barbara Lipman
From Civil Rights Worker to Civil Rights Lawyer
128(7)
Jim Lewis
C.B. King, Iconic Civil Rights Lawyer
135(3)
Dennis Roberts
Seeking Justice for a Blind Black Man in Front of Judge Cox
138(3)
Bill Ferguson
"Summer Vacation" in Mississippi
141(6)
Kent Spriggs
Get a Bullet in Your Car at the Law Library
147(1)
Larry Aschenbrenner
The Politics of Civil Rights Lawyering
148(6)
Henry Aronson
The Rev. C.K. Steele and Racism in Tallahassee
154(6)
Kent Spriggs
Mississippi Notes
160(3)
Elliott C. Lichtman
Opening Up the Closed Society
163(4)
Armand Derfner
5 Arrests Of Lawyers (And Other "Minor Indignities")
167(37)
Two Arrests While Practicing Law in Mississippi
167(6)
John C. Brittain
Doing a Little Time in Holly Springs
173(4)
Armand Derfner
Elements of Procedure I Missed at Harvard Law School
177(2)
Mac Farmer
Two Arrests, a Beating, and a Moment of Weakness
179(10)
Kent Spriggs
Arrested by Leander Perez Sr.
189(7)
Richard Sobol
Getting Punched by Sheriff Clark and Other Misadventures
196(4)
Henry Aronson
Get a Rifle Barrel in the Mouth for Monitoring an Election in Belzoni
200(2)
David Lipman
A Very Bad Morning in Rankin County
202(2)
Constance Slaughter-Harvey
6 Modes Of Law Practice
204(43)
538 1/2: The Legal Defense Fund Office in Mississippi
204(8)
Fred Banks
Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee in Louisiana
212(9)
Richard Sobol
Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee in Mississippi
221(6)
Mac Farmer
It Changed My Life: Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee in Mississippi
227(5)
Armand Derfner
The Formation of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law
232(2)
Larry Aschenbrenner
Private Practice in Alabama
234(4)
Larry Menefee
Nonprofit and Private Practice in Alabama
238(11)
Jack Drake
Part
3. Basic Legal Rights
247(98)
7 Access To Justice
249(6)
The Friendly Judicial Climate
249(6)
Armand Derfner
8 Voting Rights And Political Representation
255(20)
Voting Shenanigans in Madison Parish
255(2)
Richard Sobol
Civil Rights Lawyers Emerge into Politics
257(2)
Fred Banks
Voting Rights in Edgefield County
259(7)
Laughlin McDonald
Challenging At-Large Elections
266(4)
Larry Menefee
Mississippi Pushes Back against the Voting Rights Act
270(2)
Larry Aschenbrenner
Voting in Leflore County
272(3)
David Lipman
9 Public Accommodations
275(23)
Solomon Seay Seeks Public Accommodation
275(5)
Solomon Seay
Desegregating the Neshoba County Courthouse
280(1)
Don Marmaduke
Integrating the Fox Theater
281(10)
Richard Tuttle
Trying to Get Service at Bill's Highway 80 24-Hour Truck Stop
291(3)
Richard Sobol
Integrating the Admiral Benbow Inn Swimming Pool
294(2)
Larry Aschenbrenner
Desegregating the Parliament House Hotel
296(2)
Henry Aronson
10 School Desegregation And Municipal Equalization
298(26)
Ulysses S. Grant's Legacy
298(5)
John Maxey
School Desegregation and Municipal Equalization
303(9)
David Lipman
The Legal Defense Fund's Massive Effort
312(7)
Fred Banks
Desegregating Schools in Northern Mississippi
319(5)
Kent Spriggs
11 Employment Discrimination
324(21)
Crown Zellerbach Becomes the Standard
324(6)
Richard Sobol
The Perfectly Segregated Plant in the Perfectly Segregated Town
330(9)
Kent Spriggs
Monsanto: Fair Employment Comes to a Megaplant
339(8)
Kent Spriggs
Part
4. How The Civil Rights Movement And Litigation Advanced Other Movements For Social Justice
345(36)
12 Constitutional Race-Based Litigation And The Friendly Judicial Climate Lead To Other Areas Of Constitutional Litigation
347(10)
The Constitution Comes to the State Residential Hospitals
347(5)
Jack Drake
The Rule of Law Comes to Infamous Parchman Prison
352(5)
David Lipman
13 How The Civil Rights Movement And Litigation Informed Other Movements For Social Justice
357(9)
The Legacy of Other Social Justice Movements
357(5)
Barbara Phillips
Civil Rights in Mississippi Informs LGBT Concerns
362(4)
Mac Farmer
14 Framing The Contemporary Dialogue Of Race
366(15)
The Trojan Horse Called "Diversity"
366(8)
Barbara Phillips
White Supremacy Lives
374(7)
Larry Menefee
Conclusion 381(4)
About the Editor 385(2)
List of Contributors 387(2)
Index 389
Kent Spriggs, author of the two-volume Representing Plaintiffs in Title VII Actions, has been a civil rights lawyer for fifty-two years. He practices in Tallahassee, Florida, where he was a city commissioner and mayor.