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The Politics of White Rights - Race, Justice, and Integrating Alabama's Schools (Paperback) Loot Price: R929
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The Politics of White Rights - Race, Justice, and Integrating Alabama's Schools (Paperback): Joseph Bagley

The Politics of White Rights - Race, Justice, and Integrating Alabama's Schools (Paperback)

Joseph Bagley; Series edited by Bryant Simon, Jane Dailey

Series: Politics and Culture in the Twentieth-Century South Ser.

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List price R1,091 Loot Price R929 Discovery Miles 9 290 | Repayment Terms: R87 pm x 12* You Save R162 (15%)

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In The Politics of White Rights, Joseph Bagley recounts the history of school desegregation litigation in Alabama, focusing on the malleability and durability of white resistance. He argues that the litigious battles of 1954-73 taught Alabama's segregationists how to fashion a more subtle defense of white privilege, placing them in the vanguard of a new conservatism oriented toward the Sunbelt, not the South. Scholars have recently begun uncovering the ways in which segregationists abandoned violent backlash and overt economic reprisal and learned how to rearticulate their resistance and blind others to their racial motivations. Bagley is most interested in a creedal commitment to maintaining "law and order," which lay at the heart of this transition. Before it was a buzz phrase meant to conjure up fears of urban black violence, "law and order" represented a politics that allowed self-styled white moderates to begrudgingly accept token desegregation and to begin to stake their own claims to constitutional rights without forcing them to repudiate segregation or white supremacy. Federal courts have, as recently as 2014, agreed that Alabama's property tax system is crippling black education. Bagley argues that this is because, in the late 1960s, the politics of law and order became a politics of white rights, which supported not only white flight to suburbs and private schools but also nominally color-blind changes in the state's tax code. These changes were designed to shield white money from the needs of increasingly black public education. Activists and courts have been powerless to do anything about them, because twenty years of desperate litigious combat finally taught Alabama lawmakers how to erect constitutional bulwarks that could withstand a legal assault.

General

Imprint: University of Georgia Press
Country of origin: United States
Series: Politics and Culture in the Twentieth-Century South Ser.
Release date: December 2018
Authors: Joseph Bagley
Series editors: Bryant Simon • Jane Dailey
Dimensions: 229 x 152mm (L x W)
Format: Paperback
Pages: 296
ISBN-13: 978-0-8203-5483-5
Categories: Books > Social sciences > Education > General
Books > Humanities > History > American history > General
Books > Humanities > History > History of specific subjects > General
Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Ethnic studies > General
Books > Social sciences > Politics & government > Political control & freedoms > Human rights > Civil rights & citizenship
Books > History > American history > General
Books > History > History of specific subjects > General
LSN: 0-8203-5483-X
Barcode: 9780820354835

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