Abstract: This
article is a comprehensive look at the story of school desegregation in
the Memphis City Schools. Beginning with the Brown v. Board of Education
decision that ended segregation in schooling, the article traces the
steps taken in Memphis to put the Brown decision into practice.
Following a period of inaction and delay, the Memphis City Schools
experienced a relatively peaceful transition as token desegregation took
place in the early part of the 1960s. However, after the assassination
of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in Memphis in 1968, the community's
polarization was globally exposed and further progress on school
desegregation was limited. After federal courts ordered busing to
implement the Brown mandate, a quarter of the district's white students
departed for the nearby Shelby County Schools or for a growing, and
uniquely successful, system of private schools. Since the busing order,
the white population in the Memphis City Schools has steadily declined
so that by the 50th anniversary of the Brown decision, a district that
had been 58% white and 42% black in 1954 was 86% black and 9% white in
2004. Using the Northcross v. Board of Education of the Memphis City
Schools litigation as a guide, this article traces that history, putting
Memphis in the context of the larger desegregation story.
This article appears in the journal Law and Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice, published at the University of Minnesota School of Law.
The full article is available here.
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