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Civil Rights - Movements & Figures, United States - Ethnic & Race Relations, Civil Rights - United States, 20th Century American History - Civil Rights, Civil Rights - African American History
The Struggle for Black Equality, 1954-1992 by Harvard Sitkoff β€” book cover

The Struggle for Black Equality, 1954-1992

by Harvard Sitkoff
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Overview


The Struggle for Black Equality is an arresting history of the civil-rights movement--from the pathbreaking Supreme Court decision of 1954, Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, through the growth of strife and conflict in the 1960s to the major issues of the 1990s. harvard Sitkoff offers not only a brilliant interpretation of the personalities and dynamics of the civils-rights organization--SNCC, CORE, NAACP, SCLC, and others--but a superb study of the continuing problems plaguing the African-American population: the future that in 1980 seemed to hold much promise for a better way of life has by the early1990s hardly lived up to expectations. Jim Crow has gone, but, forty years after Brown, poverty, big-city slums, white backlash, politically and socially conservativepolicies, and prolonged recession have made economic progress for the vast majority of blacks an elusive, perhaps ever more distant goal.

All Americans who strove and suffered to make democracy real come vividly to life in these compelling pages.

About the Author, Harvard Sitkoff


Harvard Sitkoff, professor of history at the University of New Hampshire, is the author of New Deal for Blacks and editor of Fifty Years Later: The New Deal Evaluted and A History of Our Time.

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Book Details

Published
December 31, 1993
Publisher
New York : Hill and Wang, c1993.
Pages
270
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780374523565

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