DC Public Library System

Lift every voice, turning a civil rights setback into a strong new vision of social justice, Lani Guinier

Label
Lift every voice, turning a civil rights setback into a strong new vision of social justice, Lani Guinier
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 313-324) and index
resource.biographical
individual biography
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Lift every voice
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
38326310
Responsibility statement
Lani Guinier
Sub title
turning a civil rights setback into a strong new vision of social justice
Summary
In 1993, shortly after his inauguration, new President Bill Clinton nominated his old friend and classmate Lani Guinier to the prestigious and crucial post of Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights. In the face of concerted opposition - what one friend of Guinier's called "a low-tech lynching"--Clinton backed down, not only withdrawing her nomination, but having refused throughout to give her an opportunity to speak out in her own defense (and his). The result was a civil rights setback of monumental proportions. Now, in this book, at once a memoir and insider's account of what really happened behind the closed doors of the Oval Office, the Justice Department, and the U.S. Senate, and an insightful look at the past, present, and future of civil rights in America, Lani Guinier at last breaks her silence. Unsparing of her own mistakes and shrewdly perceptive about the overt and hidden agendas of those who opposed her, Professor Guinier shows how the president promptly abandoned his ambitious agenda for civil rights at the first hint of criticism from the media and Congress - and how the civil rights movement suffered a major setback as a result. Above all, Guinier goes on to describe how her experience at the hands of the press, the White House, and her congressional enemies has given her both a new voice and a renewed faith in the ongoing struggle for civil rights. Using her own nomination as a symbolic point of reference, she shows just how weak and divided the cause of civil rights has become, as its leaders have all too often been silenced by the very people they should be challenging
Table Of Contents
Introduction -- Trials -- A low-tech lynching -- Virago -- Nightline: a lone forum -- The oval office: death by a thousand cuts -- Through the looking glass: a parable of passive leadership -- Bridges -- The bridge toward freedom: fighting for a vote -- Selma, Alabama, June 1985: building bridges from the bottom up --Lawyers as bridge people: architects of a new public space -- Hearings -- The task ahead: breathing new life into American democracy -- Lift every voice -- Sources -- Index
Content
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