Available Formats
The Constitution and Race
By (Author) Donald E. Lively
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
28th February 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Human rights, civil rights
Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
Social and ethical issues
347.302873
Paperback
208
This volume examines the manner in which constitutional jurisprudence concerning race has prioritized, developed, and remained unsatisfactory in its response to racial equality and civil rights issues from the time of the Constitutional Convention to the present day. Discussed and examined are the issues of slavery, civil rights, voting rights, segregation and fairness in education, housing, law enforcement. Donald E. Lively gives an analysis of the Supreme Court's response to society's ambiguities, concerns, and conscience in the matters of race. The winning of rights has been a struggle and is far from over as the resistance to affirmative action in the present environment demonstrates. The work is a review and analysis of America's constitutional and judicial history in matters of race. The nation's enduring ambivalence and the price it pays in less than consistent constitutional interpretations on racial questions is both enlightening and disturbing. The questions, of course, are at the heart of a democracy and involve personhood, citizenship, liberty, and equality. "The Constitution and Race" should be valuable to political scientists, historians, sociologists, lawyers and students.
This sensitive analysis of the historical and contemporary problems of racial justice describes the development of legal ideas within the real world of social constraints.-Legal Studies Forum
"This sensitive analysis of the historical and contemporary problems of racial justice describes the development of legal ideas within the real world of social constraints."-Legal Studies Forum
DONALD E. LIVELY is a Professor of Law at the University of Toledo College of Law. He is the author of Modern Communications Law (Praeger, 1991) and Essential Principles of Communications Law (Praeger, 1991).