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Article
African Americans and the Struggle for Opportunity in Florida Public Higher Education, 1947–1977
History of Education Quarterly
  • Larry Johnson, University of South Florida
  • Deirdre Cobb-Roberts, University of South Florida
  • Barbara Shircliffe, University of South Florida
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-1-2007
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-5959.2007.00103.x
Abstract

In the decades following World War II, access to higher education became an important vehicle for expanding opportunity in the United States. The African American–led Civil Rights Movement challenged discrimination in higher education at a time when state and federal government leaders saw strengthening public higher education as necessary for future economic growth and development. Nationally, the 1947 President’s Commission on Higher Education report Higher Education for American Democracy advocated dismantling racial, geographic, and economic barriers to college by radically expanding public higher education, to be accomplished in large part through the development of community colleges. Although these goals ere widely embraced across the country, in the South, white leaders rejected the idea that racial segregation stood in the way of progress. During the decades following World War II, white southern educational and political leaders resisted attempts by civil rights organizations to include desegregation as part of the expansion of public higher education.

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Citation / Publisher Attribution

History of Education Quarterly, v. 47, issue 3, p. 328-358.

Citation Information
Larry Johnson, Deirdre Cobb-Roberts and Barbara Shircliffe. "African Americans and the Struggle for Opportunity in Florida Public Higher Education, 1947–1977" History of Education Quarterly Vol. 47 Iss. 3 (2007) p. 328 - 358
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/deirdre_cobb-roberts/18/