by Cathy Cambron (Editor)
In 1954, the US Supreme Court ruled that racial segregation in public schools violated the civil rights of Black schoolchildren. The brilliant and courageous lawyer behind that ruling, Thurgood Marshall, became the Court's first Black justice in 1967 and continues to inspire decades later. This accessible collection of Marshall's own words spans his long career as advocate, jurist, and judicial philosopher and includes introductions providing historical and legal context.
Author Biography
Cathy Cambron, JD, is a lawyer, editor, and writer. She previously edited and wrote an introduction for The Way Women Are: Transformative Opinions and Dissents of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (Welcome Rain, 2020). Cathy lives in Asheville, North Carolina.