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Lewis, John – American Educator, 1998
Describes the Nashville (Tennessee) lunch-counter sit-ins in 1960, civil-rights demonstrations led by students, and the resultant boycott of downtown businesses by blacks and sympathetic, or uneasy, whites. Many participants in the Nashville sit-ins went on to larger roles in the civil-rights movement. (SLD)
Descriptors: Activism, Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights, Demonstrations (Civil)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
McPhail, Clark – American Sociological Review, 1971
Descriptors: Activism, Aggression, Catharsis, Civil Disobedience
Browder, Lesley, Jr. – Amer Sch Board J, 1970
Argues that support for student rights by Supreme Court ruling on the concept in loco parentis" will help students extend their involvement in school decision making. (KJ)
Descriptors: Activism, Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights, Student Behavior
Gross, Robert A. – New England Social Studies Bulletin, 1987
Reports on the story of Daniel Shays' sale of a sword given to him by General Lafayette. The story was used by Shays' contemporaries as a means of attacking the rebellion. Notes that while Shay died a poor and homeless man, we remember and honor him for devotion to principle and the responsibility he showed toward his neighbors. (JDH)
Descriptors: Citizenship, Civics, Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Zarefsky, David – Central States Speech Journal, 1983
Identifies and assesses the values displayed in Lyndon Johnson's communication about the riots during his term of office. (PD)
Descriptors: Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights, Communication (Thought Transfer), Persuasive Discourse
Gaillard, Frye – Race Relations Reporter, 1972
Argues that the struggle for integration, though winnable, will be longer and more arduous than many had hoped; but that for Abernathy, there is still the dream and vision of a slightly earlier day, and the he can still elicit the euphoria that always went with it. (RJ)
Descriptors: Black History, Black Leadership, Black Organizations, Black Power
Farmer, James – Today's Education, 1982
The author looks back on the early days of the civil rights movement and recreates the tension and fear of that time for young Blacks. He describes the first freedom ride to Jackson, Mississippi, where White supremacy still ruled, and the courage it took to challenge segregation injunctions backed by mobs. (PP)
Descriptors: Black Leadership, Black Organizations, Black Youth, Civil Disobedience
Lum, Lydia – Black Issues in Higher Education, 2005
This document is an analysis of the authors' experience of her private tour of the Dexter Parsonage Museum, the former residence of Dr. Martin Luther King, in Montgomery, Alabama. The author then goes on to discuss civil rights and importance of the continued need for Black History Month.
Descriptors: African American History, Civil Rights, African Americans, Racial Bias
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rosenthal, Joel – Journal of Negro Education, 1975
An historical account of Southern Black student dissent in Black colleges in this century which focuses on the continuing conflict between the traditional forces of integration and the pull of assimilation as opposed to a more recent emphasis on black nationalism and a search for a truly black university structure. (EH)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Activism, Black Colleges, Black Community
Oliver, Donald W.; Newmann, Fred M. – 1967
See TE 499 864, above.
Descriptors: Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights, Colonial History (United States), Demonstrations (Civil)
Rowland, Della – 1990
This biography for younger readers depicts the life of Martin Luther King, Jr., the Nobel Peace Prize winner who dedicated himself to the struggle for equal rights for African Americans while embracing the principle of nonviolent resistance. The book presents an overview of the civil rights movement and chronicles King's role as national leader…
Descriptors: Activism, Biographies, Black History, Black Leadership
Sneed, Don; Stonecipher, Harry W. – 1989
The ultimate test of the speech-action dichotomy, as it relates to symbolic speech to be considered by the courts, may be the fasting of prison inmates who use hunger strikes to protest the conditions of their confinement or to make political statements. While hunger strikes have been utilized by prisoners for years as a means of protest, it was…
Descriptors: Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights, Communication Research, Court Litigation
Johnson, Jacqueline – 1990
This biography for younger readers presents the life of Stokely Carmichael, who made famous the phrase "Black Power" as he fought for the rights of black people in the United States and who later settled in Africa, where he organizes young Africans to work for their rights. The book is introduced by an overview of the civil rights…
Descriptors: Activism, Biographies, Black History, Black Leadership
Culver, David M. – New England Social Studies Bulletin, 1987
Recounts the political, economic, social, and governmental situations surrounding Shays' Rebellion, the 1786 farmer's uprising in Massachusetts which, among other things, demonstrated the need for a stronger federal government. Concludes with contemporary analogies and the statement that, in a free society, the conflict between the legitimate…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Civics, Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights
Allen, Terry Y. – New England Social Studies Bulletin, 1987
Reports on the work of Amherst College historian Robert A. Gross, a leading expert on the topic of Shays' Rebellion. Includes a collection of insights Dr. Gross has developed concerning the rebellion's meaning and its impact on the United States Constitution. (JDH)
Descriptors: Citizenship, Civics, Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights
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