Essays examining the now-legendary social movements of the 1960s and their impact on American public policy then and now. Each essay in this volume sheds light on an important aspect of the decade-actually a decade and half-known as the Sixties. The Sixties are famous for the diverse social movements that threatened the essence of American public policy and mainstream society and changed those very entities in fundamental ways. These essays juxtapose the dramatic narratives of social movements, including civil rights, women's liberation, and anti-war protest, and the Cold War liberalism that spawned them. The contributors are two political scientists, several historians influenced by the social sciences, and the senior staff attorney for the NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund. FOR ADS: Contributors are Brian Balogh, Hugh Heclo, Martha Derthick, Daryl Michael Scott, W. J. Rorabaugh, Martha F. Davis, and Louis Galambos. Contents Introduction / Brian Balogh The Sixties' False Dawn: Awakenings, Movements, and Postmodern Policy-Making / Hugh Heclo Crossing Thresholds: Federalism in the 1960s / Martha Derthick The Politics of Pathology: The Ideological Origins of the Moynihan Controversy / Daryl Michael Scott Challenging Authority, Seeking Community, and Empowerment in the New Left, Black Power, and Feminism / W. J. Rorabaugh Welfare Rights and Women's Rights in the 1960s / Martha F. Davis Paying Up: The Price of the Vietnam War / Louis Galambos
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