Making Civil Rights Law: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court, 1936-1961 by Mark V. Tushnet

Making Civil Rights Law: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court, 1936-1961



Download Making Civil Rights Law: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court, 1936-1961




Making Civil Rights Law: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court, 1936-1961 Mark V. Tushnet
Language: English
Page: 416
Format: pdf
ISBN: 0195084128, 9781423738886
Publisher:

From Publishers Weekly

Though this book covers some of the same ground as more popular histories like Richard Kluger's Simple Justice , Tushnet offers a more detailed and nuanced look at the workings of NAACP Legal Defense Fund lawyers and the internal arguments at the Supreme Court. A professor at Georgetown University Law Center, Tushnet draws on a wealth of materials--including newly available documents and interviews with Marshall himself--to provide a substantial, if dry, account for students and scholars. He explains how Marshall and his team at the NAACP moved from voting rights cases to education cases, and how sociological material crucial to Brown v . Board of Education was employed in restrictive covenant cases. He also provides a thorough account of the ideas and arguments of the individual justices who heard Brown , including the decision to reach the much criticized formulation of desegregation at "all deliberate speed." Marshall, observes Tushnet with judicious admiration, "constructed the job of civil rights lawyer" beginning in 1938, but by the late 1950s, he notes, the growth of a larger movement complete with demonstrations and boycotts made litigation less crucial to the civil rights movement.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews

Tushnet (Law Center/Georgetown) offers an absorbing account of the legal struggles, led by Thurgood Marshall, to achieve civil rights for African-Americans. Had Marshall never sat on the US Supreme Court, he would have won an enduring place in American legal history for his work as general counsel to the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, when he helped to create a massive body of civil rights law that at last gave some substance to the Constitution's promises of equality of opportunity and racial justice. Here, Tushnet tells of Marshall's early education under Howard University's Charles Hamilton Houston, who taught Marshall how litigation could be used as a tool for social engineering. Although Marshall tried to carry on a conventional legal practice in Baltimore, he was drawn to the work of the NAACP; by 1936, he was working for the NAACP full-time in New York. Tushnet recounts the NAACP's often unsuccessful struggles in the lower courts, the hostile and sometimes violent resistance met by NAACP plaintiffs and lawyers in the courts of the South, and the long and frustratingly slow processes of developing factual records and arguing appeals. Nonetheless, Marshall and his legal team achieved important results in several areas that were pervaded by racial segregation, in all of which he won victories before the US Supreme Court: desegregating universities; attacking racially restrictive covenants in housing contracts; and challenging rules of parties and private political organizations that allowed only whites to vote in primaries. Yet these victories left intact Plessy v. Ferguson, an 1896 Supreme Court precedent that permitted legalized racial segregation. Tushnet devotes most of his account to the long, slow development of the record in Brown v. Board of Education (1955), the briefing and argument in that historic case, the Court's decision to overturn Plessy, and the stormy, often bloody aftermath. An important and well-told account of the often-neglected legal struggle for civil rights. -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

?Chemistry In Alternative Reaction Media download pdf