Student's Guide to Landmark Congressional Laws on Civil Rights

Student's Guide to Landmark Congressional Laws on Civil Rights

Student's Guide to Landmark Congressional Laws on Civil Rights

Student's Guide to Landmark Congressional Laws on Civil Rights

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Overview

The Declaration of Independence stated that all men are created equal, yet the long and continuing struggle for civil rights in the United States seems to indicate otherwise. This reference guide details the most critical civil rights laws in U.S. history, moving from the period of slavery, to the Civil War, to the Reconstruction, to the civil rights era of the mid- to late-20th century. An overview essay introduces each period, and 36 individual laws are examined in essays placing the bills in their historical contexts. Each law is then presented in an edited and, when appropriate, annotated form, so students can read and understand the actual words of the law.

Many of the notable and notorious laws in U.S. legislative history have come in the area of civil rights. Among these are the Fugitive Slave Act, the Missouri Compromise, the Emancipation Proclamation, the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Voting Rights Acts of 1965. This uncommonly helpful guide to U.S. civil rights legislation also includes timelines, a bibliography, and an index.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313077166
Publisher: ABC-CLIO, Incorporated
Publication date: 10/30/2002
Series: Student's Guide to Landmark Congressional Laws Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 471 KB
Age Range: 14 - 17 Years

About the Author

MARCUS D.POHLMANN is currently the chairman of the Department of Political Science at Rhodes College. He has published widely in the field of African-American Politics, including Black Politics in Conservative America and Racial Politics at the Crossroads.

LINDA VALLAR WHISENHUNT is Legal Fellow in the Richard W. Riley Institute of Government Politics and Public Leadership at Furman University where she instructs students in trial advocacy. She is also of counsel to the law frim of Douglas A. Churdar, P.C., and has practiced in the area of labor and employment law.

Table of Contents

Series Forewordxi
Acknowledgmentsxv
Introductionxvii
Timelinexxiii
Part IThe Slavery Period1
1.Articles of Confederation (1776)3
2.Declaration of Independence (1776)8
3.Northwest Ordinance (1787)13
4.United States Constitution (1787)16
5.Fugitive Slave Act (1793)22
6.Slave Importation Act (1807)27
7.Missouri Compromise (1820)35
8.Compromise of 1850 (1850)40
9.Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854)46
10.Constitution of the Confederate States of America (1861)52
11.Confiscation Acts (1861 and 1862)56
12.Emancipation Proclamation (1863)62
Part IIPostwar Reconstruction69
13.Freedmen's Bureau (1865)71
14.Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (1865)78
15.Civil Rights Act (1866)82
16.Reconstruction Act (1867)85
17.Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (1868)92
18.Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (1870)102
19.Enforcement Act (1870)106
20.Klan Act (1871)115
21.Civil Rights Act (1875)123
Part IIICivil Rights Era129
22.Executive Order 8802 (1941)133
23.Executive Order 9808 (1946)139
24.Executive Order 9980 (1948)145
25.Executive Order 9981 (1948)152
26.Executive Order 10730 (1957)157
27.Civil Rights Act (1957)163
28.Civil Rights Act (1960)173
29.Executive Order 10925 (1961)183
30.Executive Order 11053 (1962)194
31.Executive Order 11063 (1962)199
32.Twenty-Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution (1964)207
33.Civil Rights Act (1964)210
34.Voting Rights Act (1965)235
35.Executive Order 11246 (1965)250
36.Fair Housing Act (1968)261
Bibliography275
Index277
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