Brian Landsberg Book Reading

April 03, 2007

Come hear Professor Brian Landsberg read from his newest publication,

Free at Last to VOTE
The Alabama Origins of the 1965 Voting Rights Act

When:  Date: Tuesday, April 3, 2007, 4 p.m.

Where:  The California Room of the Gordon D. Schaber Law Library
3200 Fifth Avenue
Sacramento, California 95817

Although the heroism of last century’s freedom marches will long be credited for ending racial discrimination, civil rights legislation owes much to work done more quietly in the district courtrooms of the South. This book expands our understanding of how the Voting Rights Act came about by focusing on several key cases in Alabama that paved the way for this landmark legislation.

Brian K. Landsberg - himself a participant in many of these trials - argues that Department of Justice litigation contributed significantly to the content of the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act. His close analysis of these trials shows how they helped pave the way for the dramatic expansion of federal power in combating racist enforcement of voting laws. Focusing on three out of the seventy voting rights cases filed between 1957 and 1965, he reveals how the DOJ, newly armed with authority to bring civil suits against voting discrimination, aggressively pursued its efforts to enforce the Reconstruction Amendments.

Brian K. Landsberg worked on voting rights cases in Alabama for the Department of Justice in 1964. He is professor of law at the McGeorge School of Law, University of the Pacific, and author of Enforcing Civil Rights.

$34.95
Cloth, 280 pages
ISBN 978-0-7006-1510-0


“Landsberg’s memoir and history of the Justice Department’s voting litigation in Elmore, Perry, and Sumter Counties is a richly valuable addition to our understanding of the origins of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.”—David J. Garrow, author of Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference

“Before Martin Luther King’s celebrated campaign for voting rights in Selma in 1965, the Department of Justice had more quietly paved the way for federal legislation to enfranchise African Americans in the South. Landsberg’s book uncovers an important dimension behind that pioneering legislation.”—Steven F. Lawson, author of Civil Rights Crossroads: Nation, Community, and the Black Freedom Movement.