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Zusatztext a deeply researched and detailed portrait of a racially-diverse state and nation that undermines any attempt to track some sort of teleological advance of colour-blind racial justice in the civil rights era. Informationen zum Autor Mark Brilliant is Assistant Professor of History, University of California, Berkeley. Was Fellow at the Center for Comparative Studies of Race and Ethnicity, 2002-3 Postdoctoral Fellow, Howard R. Lamar Center for the Study of Frontiers and Borders, Yale University. Klappentext This book examines the Civil Rights Movement in the West in order to bring the West to the Civil Rights Movement. In particular, it explores the challenge that racial diversity in California posed for building a multiracial civil rights movement. Mark Brilliant examines the state's crazy-quilt Jim Crow-style laws and legislation, including fair employment practices, old age pensions for non-citizens, fair housing, school desegregation, and bilingual education.Discrimination in California was not only racial, but was also affected by citizenship status, perceptions of "foreignness," language issues, agricultural vs. industrial occupation, and rural vs. urban residence. These different axes of discrimination pointed to different and sometimes conflicting avenuesof legislative and legal redress. Zusammenfassung Historians of the Civil Rights Movement have long set their sights on the struggles of African Americans in the South and! more recently! North. In doing so! they either omit the West or merge it with the North! defined as anything outside the former Confederacy. Historians of the American West have long set the region apart from the South and North! citing racial diversity as one of the West's defining characteristics. This book integrates the two! examining theCivil Rights Movement in the West in order to bring the West to the Civil Rights Movement. In particular! it explores the challenge that California's racial diversity posed for building a multiracial civil rights movement! focusing on litigation and legislation initiatives advanced by civil rightsreformers (lawyers! legislators! and advocacy organizations) on behalf of the state's different racial groups. A tension between sameness and difference cut through California's civil rights history. On the one hand! the state's civil rights reformers embraced a common goal - equality of opportunity through anti-discrimination litigation and legislation. To this end! they often analogized the plights of racial minorities! accentuating the racism in general that each group faced in order to helpfacilitate coalition building across groups. This tension - and its implications for the cultivation of a multiracial civil rights movement - manifested itself from the moment that one San Francisco-based NAACP leader expressed his wish for "a united front of all the minority groups" in 1944.Variations proved major enough to force the litigation down discrete paths! reflective of how legalized segregation affected African Americans! Japanese Americans! and Mexican Americans in different ways. This "same but different" tension continued into the 1950s and 1960s! as civil rights reformers ventured down anti-discrimination roads that began where legalized segregation ended. In the end! despite their endorsement of a common goal and calls for a common struggle! California's civilrights reformers managed to secure little coalescence - and certainly nothing comparable to the movement in the South. Instead! the state's civil rights struggles unfolded along paths that were mostly separate. The different axes of racialized discrimination that confronted the state's differentracialized groups called forth different avenues of redress! creating a civil rights landscape criss-crossed with color lines rather than bi-sected by any single color line. ...