Tuesday, February 16, 2010

5 Scholarly Sources

Altbach, Philip G., and Robert Cohen. "American Student Activism: The Post-Sixties Transformation." The Journal of Higher Education 61.1 (1990): 32-49. Print.

COLUMBIA LAW STUDENT. "A STUDENT'S PROTEST :AGAINST THE PROPOSED CHANGES IN THE COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL.. " New York Times (1857-1922) 31 Mar. 1891,ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 - 2006), ProQuest. Web.

Ellen Hoffman Washington Post Staff Writer. "A New Look in Campus Rules :Colleges Take
Note of Drugs, Alcohol and Student Protest. " The Washington Post, Times Herald
(1959-1973) 26 Sep. 1968,ProQuest Historical Newspapers The Washington Post
(1877 - 1993), ProQuest. Web.

Lipsky, Michael. "Protest as a Political Resource." The American Political Science Review
62.4 (1968): 1144-58. Print.

Rhoads, Robert A. "Student Protest and Multicultural Reform: Making Sense of Campus
Unrest in the 1990s." The Journal of Higher Education 69.6 (1998): 621-46. Print.

1 comment:

  1. I think the last one looks good. The others may give you some historical or cultural perspective. I'd be more interested in the effects of protesting on students. Read the part of Moffatt (118ff) where he talks about the South Africa divestment rallies in the 80s and their effect on students. Could protest educate students in the ways that the liberal arts are intended to do? But might the act of protest itself engender liberation in ways the liberal arts cannot?

    ReplyDelete