194 research outputs found

    Closing Ranks: Montgomery Jews and civil rights, 1954–1960

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    The arrest of Rosa Parks on 1 December 1955 provided the spark which ignited the long smouldering resentments of black Montgomerians. For 381 days they waged a boycott of the city bus lines, frustrating the opposition of white authorities and financially crippling the local transit company. More profoundly it resulted in a Supreme Court decision outlawing segregation on public transportation. Equally momentous was the emergence of the man who would serve as the spiritual figurehead of the civil rights movement: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. In the wake of the Montgomery bus boycott, one national black newspaper acclaimed King as “Alabama's Modern Moses.” Since the darkest days of slavery African-Americans had sought spiritual salvation by comparing their own condition to that of God's Chosen People, the Israelites of the Old Testament. Throughout their years of enslavement they prayed for the Moses who would deliver them from their suffering unto the Promised Land. During the boycott, the black citizens of Montgomery had similarly sustained their morale by singing the old slave spirituals, raising their voices at the nightly mass meetings in rousing renditions of “Go Down Moses, Way Down in Egypt Land.” “As sure as Moses got the children of Israel across the Red Sea,” King exhorted the black community, “we can stick together and win.” Others too drew the analogy between the historical experience of Jews and the contemporary predicament of African-Americans. Looking back on the boycott, white liberal activist Virginia Durr evoked the spectre of Nazi Germany in describing the strength of racist opposition

    “A cheap trafficking in human misery”: the reverse Freedom Rides of 1962

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    Shortly after 7 o'clock on the morning of 20 April 1962, Louis and Dorothy Boyd arrived at the Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York City. The journey from their native New Orleans had taken forty-three hours. With the Boyds were their eight children, five girls and three boys aged between three and twelve years old. Between them the family carried their entire worldly possessions in three cardboard boxes and an old foot locker

    Freedom for all? Blacks, Jews, and the political censorship of white racists in the civil rights era

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    Reluctant partners: African Americans and the origins of the special relationship

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    This article assesses the overwhelmingly negative reaction of African Americans to the speech delivered by Winston Churchill in Fulton, Missouri, in March 1947. It shows that black intellectuals and activists fervently opposed the Anglo-American alliance championed by the former prime minister because they believed it a cynical attempt to buttress an exploitative overseas empire that Britain could no longer afford. African Americans considered Churchill a racist intent on preserving white global hegemony and suppressing the democratic aspirations of people of colour. Despite their initial optimism about the Attlee government elected to power in July 1945, they became almost as mistrustful of the Labour Party as they did the Conservatives. In demonstrating how African Americans considered the Anglo-American alliance to be a means of propagating white racism, the article provides a new perspective on grassroots resistance to the Special Relationship, emphasising tensions between diplomatic elites and ordinary citizens

    A comparison of subjective experiences and responses to austerity of UK and Greek youth

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    Following previous research carried out by Chalari (2014; 2015), this qualitative study explores the ways in which the younger generation in Greece and UK has been affected by austerity policy measures. These two countries have been at the forefront of intense social, political and economic transformations that have impacted particularly on young people’s current and future lives. This study aims to explore similarities and differences in young people’s subjective experiences and responses, as from this it may be possible to discern whether there is a general, long-term negative effect of austerity across Europe. The data shows that there are some similarities in the two cohorts’ subjective experiences and responses, but perhaps more interestingly some significant differences. The study discusses what the implications of these differences might be for young people and society in these countries, in terms of their impact on the abilities of the younger generation, in a way that has the potential to destabilize their personal and professional lives now and in the future

    Improving understanding of fish farm organic waste dispersal in higher energy environments

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    Organic waste from open cage fish farms can negatively impact the benthos if the quantities of settling material exceed the natural assimilative capacity of the seabed. The amounts of total organic material which are allowed to be released are thus regulated in most countries where open-cage fish farming takes place. In Scotland, limits on settling organic waste are one of the main factors determining the maximum fish biomass permitted at a farm site. Computer models of the dispersal of total organic waste to the seabed have become an important tool in both initial site licencing, but also continued site monitoring. Introduction to Executive Summary:The main organic waste dispersal model used in Scotland is DEPOMOD. Originally developed in the late 1990s this model has gone through several upgrades, the latest version being NewDEPOMOD. The original model was developed and calibrated for relatively sheltered, low dispersal sea-loch sites with muddy seabed, where the model’s predictive capability has proven to be generally high. However, many newer fish farms have been developed in more dispersive sites. Despite NewDEPOMOD incorporating a relatively sophisticated waste resuspension sub-model, problems have been encountered with accurately predicting the benthic footprint of fish farm organic waste at these more dispersive sites. The main aim of the INCREASE project was to try and improve our understanding of why these predictive problems are occurring and to suggest future work to address any issues identified

    SoDa: a Web service on solar radiation

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    ISBN 3-9809656-4-3International audienceA Web service has been developed for answering the needs of industry and research for information on solar radiation parameters with a satisfactory quality. It intends to solve the three major problems identified by customers: i) improving access to information, ii) improving knowledge on space and time structure and iii) improving matching of delivered information to actual needs of customers. This service (http://www.soda-is.com) is also innovative with respect to the Internet technologies: it is performing a smart networking of information sources of different natures: databases (radiation, meteorology, elevation, geography...) and algorithms (computation of radiation on slopes, sizing of systems...). These sources were available separately and are geographically dispersed. The service SoDa makes them cooperating and combines them in order to answer to requests, ranging from a series of irradiation values to the sizing of a system
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