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Edited by Eric Rise,
University of Delaware
   

   
Race, Law, and the Desegregation of Public Schools
   

Peter William Moran

       
   

Using Kansas City, Missouri, as a case study, Moran considers the full spectrum of social, political, legal, and economic factors affecting school desegregation over a 50-year period and draws conclusions for the nation as a whole.

Moran examines Kansas City, Missouri, as a case study of school desegregation during the period 1949 to 1999. He argues that school desegregation is best understood as a process that influenced, and was influenced by, a multitude of factors. In this context, developments in Kansas City and elsewhere are presented as products of the interplay between evolving legal standards, shifting demographic patterns, the changing social, political, and economic climate of the city, fiscal considerations, and the actions and motivations of public policy makers. The successes and failures of desegregation are considered in light of each of these interconnected variables, drawing implications for the nation as a whole.

       
  Peter William Moran is an assistant professor of Elementary Education at the University of Wyoming, teaching courses in the history of education and methods of teaching social studies. He earned his Ph.D. from Kansas State University in 2000
       
    viii, 316 pages. Index, bibliography. ISBN 1-59332-039-6.
$70. Published.