Since its inception in 1957, the United States Commission on Civil Rights has been at the forefront of efforts by the Federal Government and state governments to examine and resolve issues related to race, ethnicity, religion and, more recently, sexual orientation. Although the fortunes of the Commission have ebbed and flowed with changes in presidential administrations, the Commission has continued to be a vital part of the effort to build an America that is truly equal. By providing access to the historical record of this important federal agency, the Thurgood Marshall Law Library will offer scholars an opportunity to examine the efforts of the Commission more closely.
A partnership of the United States Government Printing Office, The United States Commission on Civil Rights and the Thurgood Marshall Law Library.
For more information the origins and scope of this collection, please see Bill Sleeman, Building a Digital Collection: The Making of Historical Publications of the United States Commission on Civil Rights, AALL Spectrum, Mar. 2004, at 8.
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Publications in the USCCR collection are searchable by keyword and accessible by date, title and SuDoc number.
Browse Publications in the USCCR Collection
TITLE | DATE | SUBJECT | SUDOC NUMBERS | RECENT ADDITIONS
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In conjunction with the Thurgood Marshall Law Library's strategic plan to enhance its civil rights collection in support of the School of Law's teaching and research mission, the Library has worked since 2001 to create a complete electronic record of United States Commission on Civil Rights publications held in the Library's collection and available on the USCCR website. The publications are made available over the internet as page image presentations in PDF format. Publications are also searchable by keyword and accessible by date, title and SuDoc number.
Document conversion for this project is supported in part through the Ryan Easley Memorial Fund.
In 2005 the Historical Publications of the United States Commission on Civil Rights partnered with the Library of Congress' BEAT project to provide access to USCCR publications via the Web Access to Works in the Public Domain initiative.
Read more about the origins of the project in the March 2004 AALL Spectrum.