ISBN-13: 9781548164904 / Angielski / Miękka / 2017 / 218 str.
In this new publication of his 1960 thesis, Robert Stuart looks back at the historical context for the Fourteenth Amendment and the Brown v. Topeka Board of Education court case. By examining the ties between the Fourteenth Amendment (passed in 1868) and the case that ended segregation (decided in 1954), Stuart suggests how the attitudes toward integration and education were considered to have been present to the framers of the Amendment. Stuart raises the question whether education was considered by the original writers of the Fourteenth Amendment. To find the complex answer to this simple question, he dives deep into the flurry of legislation passed after the end of the Civil War, through an examination of primary sources from the time. His thesis explores the following: