Potomac Chronicle: Public Policy and Civil Rights from Kennedy to Reagan

by Virginia Fleming

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Book cover for Potomac Chronicle

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From the Kennedy administration through the end of the Reagan era, the Potomac Institute gave vital, behind-the-scenes support to countless public-and-private-sector initiatives related to equal opportunity, urban social problems, and race relations. Part history and part memoir of Harold C. Fleming, the institute's leader, The Potomac Chronicle tells for the first time how the institute served as a creative broker of talent, ideas, and resources among minorities, activists, and interest groups. Owing to Fleming's dedication, coolheadedness, and low-key approach, no other such organization was as well linked to-and as trusted by-both government policymakers and southern civil rights leaders.

In the context of major national trends and events, The Potomac Chronicle tells of the institute's role in the Kennedy administration's civil rights policy debates, in helping the Defense Department set up what would become model guidelines for civil rights compliance by federal contractors, and in informing, educating, and reassuring Americans about Lyndon Johnson's Civil Rights Act. Other accomplishments discussed include the institute's involvement in forming the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, tying civil rights requirements to government programs and private practices in education, housing, and employment, and, in the years before it closed in 1988, helping defend affirmative action.

  • ISBN13 9780820336237
  • Publish Date 1 June 2010 (first published 22 August 2003)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint University of Georgia Press
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 314
  • Language English