1: America in 1960: Blacks and Women on the Eve of Social
Revolution
2: The Kennedy Presidency and Black Civil Rights, 1960-1962
3: The Segregated Civil Rights Bills of 1963 for Women and
Blacks
4: Lyndon Johnson and The Civil Rights Act of 1964
5: The Watershed of 1965: From the Voting Rights Act to "Black
Power"
6: The EEOC and the Politics of Gender
7: Race, Affirmative Action, and Open Housing, 1965-1968
8: The Nixon Presidency: Domestic Policy and Divided Government
9: The Philadelphia Plan and the Politics of Minority
Preference
10: The "Color-Blind" Constitution and the Federal Courts
11: Women, the Nixon Administration, and the Equal Rights
Amendment
12: The Consolidation of 1972
13: The Rights Revolution and The American Administrative State
Further Reading
Glossary of Organizations
Endnotes
"Lots of ground-breaking information."--Julie Leininger Pycion,
Manhattan College
"Graham has abridged his award winning book into a highly readable
account of the role of the executive branch in civil rights policy
from the sit-ins of 1960 through Nixon's first
administration."--The Historian
"An extraordinarily well-written and fascinating account."--Thomas
A. Schwartz, Vanderbilt University
"A powerful critique of government civil rights policy after
1965."--Florida Historical Quarterly (on the First Edition)
"An informative account of the crucial years in the struggle for
racial minorities and women to gain more civil rights. There is
much in it to stimulate class discussion."--Robert W. Langran,
Villanova University
"I am pleased to see you come out with another abridgement of a
significant (if lengthy) title."--William L. Van Deburg, University
of Wisconsin
Praise for The Civil Rights Era:
"Should reacquaint a new generation with forgotten
truths....Instructive, too, is Mr. Graham's assessment of
presidential leadership"--The New York Times Book Review
"A rigorous, undiluted examination of the policies and programs
effected by the federal government in pursuit of civil equality for
all citizens....An impressive marshaling of evidence and
interpretation....An excellent resource"--Booklist
"The first administrative history of the movement....A major
milestone in the study of recent American life and
politics"--Library Journal
"Lots of ground-breaking information."--Julie Leininger Pycion,
Manhattan College
"Graham has abridged his award winning book into a highly readable
account of the role of the executive branch in civil rights policy
from the sit-ins of 1960 through Nixon's first
administration."--The Historian
"An extraordinarily well-written and fascinating account."--Thomas
A. Schwartz, Vanderbilt University
"A powerful critique of government civil rights policy after
1965."--Florida Historical Quarterly (on the First Edition)
"An informative account of the crucial years in the struggle for
racial minorities and women to gain more civil rights. There is
much in it to stimulate class discussion."--Robert W. Langran,
Villanova University
"I am pleased to see you come out with another abridgement of a
significant (if lengthy) title."--William L. Van Deburg, University
of Wisconsin
Praise for The Civil Rights Era:
"Should reacquaint a new generation with forgotten
truths....Instructive, too, is Mr. Graham's assessment of
presidential leadership"--The New York Times Book Review
"A rigorous, undiluted examination of the policies and programs
effected by the federal government in pursuit of civil equality for
all citizens....An impressive marshaling of evidence and
interpretation....An excellent resource"--Booklist
"The first administrative history of the movement....A major
milestone in the study of recent American life and
politics"--Library Journal
"A fascinating, near-definitive study of the implementation of the
transcendent cause of our times....Graham does a great service in
laying out the past so we can make sense of both it and the
present."--Review of Politics
"Could not be more timely....Notable for its prudent, credible
insights and its calm detachment in pursuit of a subject that seems
to invite little but strident advocacy and opposition, for its
command of the bewildering mass of manuscript materials in federal
archives and presidential libraries...and not least for its
analytic clarity, its anecdotal riches, and its exhaustive
exploration of a complicated and vitally important
subject."--Reviews in American
History
"A gripping, literate account of landmark civil rights legislation
governing employment, housing and voting. The executive branch
focus is also useful both in demonstrating the fundamental role
played by the White House in the enactment of these legislative
reforms and in providing insightful glimpses into the Kennedy,
Johnson and Nixon administrations....A highly accessible and quite
worthwhile addition to the literature."--Michigan Law Review
"Anyone interested in the 'rights revolution' of the 1960s can turn
to this accessible study for an insightful analysis of national
policy on race and gender in the Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon
administrations."--Georgia Historical Quarterly
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