Murder - General & Miscellaneous, Mississippi - State & Local History, Civil Rights - Movements & Figures, Civil Rights - United States, 20th Century American History - Civil Rights, Civil Rights - African American History, African American Regional Histo
Murder in Mississipp (Landmark Law Cases & American Society): United States V. Price and the Struggle For Civil Rights
Howard Ball, Peter Charles Hoffer (Editor), N.E.H. Hull
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Editorials
Library Journal
An hour before midnight on June 21, 1964, Ku Klux Klansmen murdered civil rights workers Michael Schwerner, James E. Chaney, and Andrew Goodman on Highway 19 outside Philadelphia, MS. Ball (Vermont Law Sch.) looks at the place and time fictionalized in the Oscar-winning film Mississippi Burning. Underscoring the frustrating irony of a nation reaching back to Civil War-era laws to protect civil rights workers nearly a century later, Ball deftly pivots the story on the U.S. Supreme Court's unanimous 1966 decision in U.S. v. Price to overturn federal district court rulings dismissing indictments against 18 klansmen on counts stemming from the three murders. (In 1967, seven were convicted of conspiracy but none for murder-a state charge that Mississippi has steadfastly refused to pursue.) In time for the 40th anniversary of these infamous murders, this is another gem in the "Landmark Law Cases" series and deserves a place in any serious collection on U.S. history, law, civil rights, and race relations. Highly recommended.-Thomas J. Davis, Arizona State Univ., Tempe Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.Book Details
Published
March 1, 2004
Publisher
University Press of Kansas
Pages
171
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780700613151