A useful read for graduate students and scholars of the civil rights movement. This final section in particular makes it abundantly clear that much is left to do in the continuous struggle to understand the fight for African American and indeed American civil rights.
~Arkansas Review
Presents a more complete picture of the struggle for civil rights in US history.... Recommended.
~Choice
Civil Rights Crossroads provides a comprehensive and critical survey of the modern civil rights struggle. Steven Lawson's book builds upon the remarkable outpouring during the past two decades of historical studies that have drawn attention to the contributions of little-known grassroots activists as well as national leaders. Lawson's own previous writings have been important pioneering additions to this literature, and Civil Rights Crossroads brings together the accumulated insights of a leading scholar in the field.
~Clayborne Carson, director of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Papers Project at Stanford University
Lawson's books and articles, including those in Civil Rights Crossroads, are characterized by remarkable continuity and growth.
~Journal of Southern History
An important collection of illuminating and provocative essays that explore new dimensions of the black struggle to demolish Jim Crow segregation and second-class citizenship. Lawson thoughtfully connects local events and community leaders with key national personalities and political forces. In crisp prose he displays impressive mastery of the contours of Civil Rights historiography.
~Darlene Clark Hine, author of Black Victory
Another landmark publication.... An outstanding read on the legacy of the civil rights movement and testimony of the civil rights campaign in Florida.
~Florida Historical Quarterly
[Civil Rights Crossroads] makes a valuable contribution to the historiography of the black freedom struggle by demonstrating the progression of the field from a narrow focus on prominent male leaders and national organizations to a wider lens that includes local studies and extends the movement chronology beyond 1968.... This volume represents an impressive body of work and will prove useful to scholars as well as undergraduate students.
~H-Net Reviews
Makes a valuable contribution to the historiography of the black freedom struggle by demonstrating the progression of the field from a narrow focus on prominent male leaders and national organizations to a wider lens that includes local studies and extends the movement chronologically beyond 1968.
~H-New Review
Lawson is one of the leading historians of the civil rights movement in America. While the earlier works on the movement focused on the civil rights leaders and their organizations, and the more recent studies have emphasized grass roots activism, Lawson has combined national and local perspectives better than any other scholar.
~John Dittmer, author of Local People
This collection of some of Steven Lawson's best articles does a great deal to meet a need that he and other scholars called for two decades ago: historical works that connect 'the local with the national, the social with the political.'
~North Carolina Historical Review