You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
This book contains the rich history of a people struggling to attain freedom, justice and equality, which is most defined by the Selma, AL Right To Vote Movement. From the shores of Africa to the Americas this book explores the people, through pictures, articles, quotes, poems, timelines and more. Providing the history of nonviolence as applied to the Selma Movement from the unique perspective of the strategist and nonviolent scientist James L. Bevel.
"Beginning on November 15th, 1999, the civil wrongful death trial of Martin Luther King was held in Division IV of the Circuit Court of Shelby County, Tennessee, in Memphis. This is the actual unedited transcript of the trial regarding one of the most infamous days in American history. Judge James Swearengen, Circuit Court Judge, presided over the trial with an impaneled jury of twelve people from the Memphis area."--Introduction.
The world today has no shortage of economic crises—or politicians and pundits who claim to have the vision that will get us out of the Great Recession. For 25 years, the labor-community coalition Jobs with Justice (JwJ) has endured the brutal vagaries of the global economy with a single alternative economic vision. By putting its ideas into practice, it has won powerful victories with working-class communities. Through a series of interviews and essays, this book allows the community, labor, immigrant, student, and faith activists that have built Jobs with Justice to show us why their economic vision matters. They tell us why the organization’s core principle—the power of solidarity be...
None