President___was the first American president ordering school desegregation in the South. A. John F. Kennedy B. Jimmy Carter C. Franklin Roosevelt D. Richard Nixon 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 A 正确答案:A 解析:在约翰.肯尼迪总统上台之前,艾森豪威尔总统就已经采取了各种办法解除种族隔离,但是南方顽...
In the second section, illustrating this argument, we examine a recent case of desegregation in South Africa. This concerns the relocation of a 'black' squatter community into an area that was designated 'white' during the apartheid era. Through discourse analysis of interview data, we identify...
Residential Desegregation Dynamics in the South African City of Bloemfontein The paper revisits the city of Bloemfontein more than a decade and a half after the repeal of the Group Areas Act (GAA). The aim is to determine the extent... R Rex,G Visser - 《Urban Forum》 被引量: 16发表...
In the South, desegregation had involved all kinds of school districts—rural, suburban, and urban. In the North, by contrast, the focus was almost en-tirely on the large urban districts where most minority students are enrolled.The remainder of this chapter describes four phases of de...
It is now more that fourteen years since the Supreme Court rejected gradual and voluntary transfers between black and white schools and called for root-and-branch desegregation. Almost a decade has passed since the first Supreme Court decision requiring citywide bussing outside the South. But the...
The effects of desegregation plans are considered for the two regions that are best documented, the Southern and Western states. It is found that, unlike in the South, desegregation orders are far from universal in the West, even within central cities. Chapter 4 draws conclusions and makes ...
The story in the Upper South's Virginia was hardly identical to that in the Deep South's Mississippi or, for that matter, in the Border South's Maryland, but it offers a case study of a regional phenomenon. Whether in its particulars or when contextualized in terms of developments across ...
Theoharis, J. (2003). “I’d Rather Go to School in the South”: How Boston’s School Desegregation Complicates the Civil Rights Paradigm. In: Theoharis, J., Woodard, K. (eds) Freedom North: Black Freedom Struggles Outside the South, 1940–1980. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https:/...
of the newly freed slaves were enacted in the South in 1865–66. These were abolished duringReconstruction, but after Reconstruction white dominance was thoroughly reestablished in the South, partly by the terrorism of theKu Klux Klanand other groups, but more by the persistence of social custom...
Black Struggle, Red Scare: Segregation and Anticommunism in the South, 1948-1968by Jeff Woods;A Stone of Hope: Prophetic Religion and the Death of Jim Crow... ✣✣✣ Jeff Woods, Black Struggle, Red Scare: Segregation and Anti-Communism in the South, 1948–1968. Baton Rouge: Louisiana...