(Signed Copy Paperback) America’s Peacemakers: The Community Relations Service and Civil Rights

$25.00

America’s Peacemakers: The Community Relations Service and Civil Rights is a second, updated version of the detailed journey of the CRS from 1964 to current times. In this expanded version, Grande Lum continues the fantastic work established by Bertram Levine’s scholarship, spanning what has taken place within the CRS over the last three decades in the United States.

Reader Testimonials:

“(T)his book about the history of CRS is an essential historical reference to obtaining an accurate understanding of just how prescient President Johnson was in his requirement that CRS be a constituent part of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. We all owe a debt of gratitude to the authors and to the staff, both past and present, of the Community Relations Service." — Clarence Jones, Speechwriter and Lawyer to Martin Luther King Jr. (from the foreword)

"More than ever we need mediation, dialogue, and communication regarding our many racial and class conflicts. Every city, every state, and every nation needs non-violent mediators to intervene in the many crises that are inevitable in these complex times. In this book authors Bertram Levine and Grande Lum expertly provide the evidence for the difference CRS has made for communities throughout this country.” —Andrew Young, Jr., civil rights activist and former U.S. Congressman from Georgia, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, and Mayor of Atlanta

“On my most optimistic days, I believe
the same is true for the United States — that if we individually and collectively keep doing the hard work, peace will come. For this to be so, a reinvestment in CRS is essential, and so is a reimagining of its role in the political landscape.” In reference to the Civil Rights Act, President Lyndon Johnson said CRS’s role was to “help the medicine go down.” America’s Peacekeepers makes it clear: now, more than ever, we need CRS’s “medicine.” — Deanna Pantín Parrish is a lecturer on law at Harvard Law School and a clinical instructor at the Harvard Negotiation and Mediation Clinical Program

"America's Peacemakers is an insightful book about the intricate complexities of our history and the lessons of conflict transformation that we can apply to the challenges of the present and future in order to sustain our messy, imperfect, and courageous union. Through deepening our understanding of multiple perspectives and the process of negotiation, we can challenge divisive definitions of patriotism, more consistently build justice, and grow greater compassion in our beloved nation.” — Maya Soetoro-Ng, Faculty Specialist, Spark M. Matsunaga Institute for Peace & Conflict Resolution, University of Hawaii at Manoa

“This book, America’s Peacemakers, reflects on the first 50 years of this Service’s extraordinary history. It also looks toward to the next 50. We must reaffirm our determination to meet intolerance with understanding, to confront ignorance with informed dialogue, and to promote opportunity, access, and inclusion – in every community and circumstance.” — Eric Holder, Former United States Department of Justice Attorney General

“This is not only an important history of a major part of the American civil rights movement, it should be essential reading for anyone in the conflict resolution field.” — Carrie Menkel-Meadow, UC Irvine School of Law, co-author of Dispute Resolution: Beyond the Adversarial Model

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America’s Peacemakers: The Community Relations Service and Civil Rights is a second, updated version of the detailed journey of the CRS from 1964 to current times. In this expanded version, Grande Lum continues the fantastic work established by Bertram Levine’s scholarship, spanning what has taken place within the CRS over the last three decades in the United States.

Covered in this edition are the post–9/11 efforts of the CRS to prevent violence and hate crimes against those perceived as Middle Eastern; the cross-border Elián González custody dispute, and the notable tragedies of Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown, both of which brought police interaction with communities of color back into the spotlight.  Additionally when CRS broadened its scope to encompass issues on gender identity, religion, sexual orientation and disabilities after the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act was enacted in 2009, new stories of the progression of Civil Rights in America.