The Origins of the Civil Rights Movement: Black Communities Organizing for ChangeAn account of the origins, development, and personalities of the Civil Rights movement from 1953-1963. |
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Page xiv
... participants in the move- ment and documents generated by movement participants . Secondary sources were used to complement the primary data . A researcher is indeed fortunate to be in a position to collect information from actors who ...
... participants in the move- ment and documents generated by movement participants . Secondary sources were used to complement the primary data . A researcher is indeed fortunate to be in a position to collect information from actors who ...
Page 85
... participants were being exposed to how economics could be used in terms of strat- egy . Indeed , the bus protest taught these leaders that the white com- munity was not a monolithic entity but a heterogeneous one with an array of ...
... participants were being exposed to how economics could be used in terms of strat- egy . Indeed , the bus protest taught these leaders that the white com- munity was not a monolithic entity but a heterogeneous one with an array of ...
Page 218
... participants had met at Highlander Folk School two weeks before the Raleigh meeting and had addressed many of the ... participants were students who were actively par- ticipating in sit - in demonstrations . The following recommendation ...
... participants had met at Highlander Folk School two weeks before the Raleigh meeting and had addressed many of the ... participants were students who were actively par- ticipating in sit - in demonstrations . The following recommendation ...
Contents
Domination Church and the NAACP | 1 |
Beginnings and Confrontations | 17 |
MIA ICC and ACMHR 40 | 40 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
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activists activities Albany American asked attempted Baker Baptist base became become began behavior Birmingham black community boycott called central chapter church civil rights movement closely collective Committee Conference confrontation CORE Council Court decided demonstrations developed direct action discussed domination early economic effective efforts emerged Executive financed force Freedom going groups Highlander Ibid important institutions interview involved James King knew late leaders leadership March mass meetings ment ministers mobilization Montgomery move movement centers NAACP Nashville needed Negro nonviolent organization organizational participants period person planned played political president Press problems protest racial Ralph Abernathy Report response Reverend role SCLC SCLC's segregation Shuttlesworth sit-ins SNCC social South Southern strategy struggle successful tactics Tallahassee thing University vote Walker white power structure wrote York young