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Freedom Is Not Enough The Moynihan Report and America's Struggle over Black Family Life- From LBJ to Obama

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ISBN-10: 0465013570

ISBN-13: 9780465013579

Edition: 2010

Authors: James T. Patterson

List price: $33.95
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Description:

On June 4, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson delivered what he and many others considered the greatest civil rights speech of his career. Proudly, Johnson hailed the new freedoms granted to African Americans due to the newly passed Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act, but noted that "freedom is not enough." The next stage of the movement would be to secure racial equality "as a fact and a result."The speech was drafted by an assistant secretary of labor by the name of Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who had just a few months earlier drafted a scorching report on the deterioration of the urban black family in America. When that report was leaked to the press a month after Johnson's speech, it…    
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Book details

List price: $33.95
Copyright year: 2010
Publisher: Basic Books
Publication date: 5/4/2010
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Size: 6.50" wide x 9.50" long x 1.25" tall
Weight: 1.100
Language: English

James T. Patterson is an American historian, and Ford Foundation Professor of History emeritus at Brown University. He wrote "Grand Expectations: the United States, 1945-1974," which received the 1997 Bancroft Prize in American history. (The Bancroft prize is one of the most prestigious honors a book of history can received and was established at Columbia University in 1948. It's considered to be on par with the Pulitzer Prize because an anonymous jury of peers judges it.) "Grand Expectations" is an interpretation of the explosive growth, high expectations and unusual optimism that Americans experienced after World War II that went into the 1960's. It follows the social, economic and…    

Preface: "To Fulfill These Rights," Spring 1965
The Pluck of the Irish
The Case for National Action
The Report
"The Moment Lost"
Families, Welfare, and Race, 1966-1968
Moynihan, Nixon, and the Family Assistance Plan
Unproductive Dialogue, 1971-1983
Combating the Silence, 1984-1994
Welfare Reform, Slavery, and Jeremiads
Families in the Early 2000s
From Cosby to Obama
Acknowledgments
A Note on the Sources
Notes
Index