We are registering your order now. Please stay on this page while we redirect you to the confirmation page.
This wise and affecting memoir is the inside story of the great efforts leading up to the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education in 1954 and the fight to implement it--and its implications for affirmative action and black poverty today.
A black woman who moved in the corridors of power in the middle of this century, Constance Baker Motley has been a pioneer in both black civil rights and women's rights. As the key attorney assisting Thurgood Marshall at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, she argued a dozen cases before the Supreme Court (winning all but one), and her representation of James Meredith in his bid to enroll in the University of Mississippi made her famous. Subsequently, as Manhattan borough president and a U.S. district court judge, she has fulfilled the highest aspirations of our legal and political system.
Equal Justice Under Law, the most detailed account to date of the legal conflicts of the civil rights movement, is also an account of Motley's struggle, as a black woman, to succeed, a record of a life lived with great courage and responsibility.
Chainsaw Man Box Set
$93.87
National Geographic Atlas of the World, 11th Edition
$183.40
Invincible Compendium Volume 2
$51.64
Naruto Box Set 2: Volumes 28-48 with Premium
$128.57
Diary: Divine Mercy in My Soul (Revised)
$11.61
Netter's Anatomy Flash Cards
$41.84
It's Not You: Identifying and Healing from Narcissistic People
$18.57
Amygdala
$49.86
Mom, I Want to Hear Your Story: A Mother's Guided Journal To Share Her Life & Her Love
$13.71