Published March 16, 2016 by Doug Cook

Dean Scanlon on Sexism and the Civil Rights Movement in 'The New Republic'

Jennifer Scanlon
Jennifer Scanlon

The 1963 “March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom” was a historic moment in America’s civil rights movement, writes Dean for Academic Affairs Jennifer Scanlon in The New Republic. But why did African-American women play such a small part in the event?

Scanlon—author of Until There is Justice (Oxford University Press, January 2016), a biography of black female activist Anna Arnold Hedgeman—says it’s because gender discrimination was rife among the male-dominated civil rights leadership. Read Scanlon’s New Republic article.