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Shawn Francis Peters has written 4 work(s)
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Cover for 9780199827855 Cover for 9780195306354 Cover for 9780700612727 Cover for 9780700612734 Cover for 9780700610082 Cover for 9780700611829
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Product Description: In the late 1960s an Amish community considered state education detrimental to its own values. When the state claimed truancy and took Jonas Yoder to court, a legal battle of landmark proportions followed. This volume is a complete and compelling account of the Yoder case.

Hardcover:

9780700612727 | Univ Pr of Kansas, September 1, 2003, cover price $29.95 | About this edition: In the late 1960s an Amish community considered state education detrimental to its own values.

Paperback:

9780700612734 | Univ Pr of Kansas, September 1, 2003, cover price $18.95 | About this edition: Compulsory education has always been in the best interest of the state, as it fosters good citizenship and self-sufficiency.

cover image for 9780700611829
While millions of Americans were defending liberty against the Nazis, liberty was under vicious attack at home. One of the worst outbreaks of religious persecution in U.S. history occurred during World War II when Jehovah's Witnesses were intimidated, beaten, and even imprisoned for refusing to salute the flag or serve in the armed forces.Determined to claim their First Amendment rights, Jehovah's Witnesses waged a tenacious legal campaign that led to twenty-three Supreme Court rulings between 1938 and 1946. Now Shawn Peters has written the first complete account of the personalities, events, and institutions behind those cases, showing that they were more than vindication for unpopular beliefs -- they were also a turning point in the nation's constitutional commitment to individual rights.Peters begins with the story of William Gobitas, a Jehovah's Witness whose children refused to salute the flag at school. He follows this famous case to the Supreme Court where he captures the intellectual sparring between Justices Frankfurter and Stone over individual liberties; then he describes the aftermath of the Court's ruling against Gobitas when angry mobs savagely assaulted Jehovah's Witnesses in hundreds of communities across America.Judging Jehovah's Witnesses tells how persecution -- much of it directed by members of patriotic organizations like the American Legion -- touched the lives of Witnesses of all ages; why the Justice Department and state officials ignored the Witnesses' pleas for relief; and how the ACLU and liberal clergymen finally stepped forward to help them. Drawing on interviews with Witnesses and extensive research in ACLU archives, Peters examines the strategiesthat beleaguered Witnesses used to combat discrimination and goes beyond the familiar Supreme Court rulings by analyzing more obscure lower court decisions as well.By vigorously pursuing their cause, the Witnesses helped to inaugurate an era in which individual and minority rights emerged as matters of concern for the Supreme Court and foreshadowed events in the civil rights movement. Like the classics Gideon's Trumpet and Simple Justice, Judging Jehovah's Witnesses vividly narrates a moving human drama while reminding us of the true meaning of our Constitution and the rights it protects. (view table of contents)

Hardcover:

9780700610082, titled "Judging Jehovah's Witnesses: Religious Persecution and the Dawn of the Rights Revolution" | Univ Pr of Kansas, April 1, 2000, cover price $34.95 | About this edition: While millions of Americans were defending liberty against the Nazis, liberty was under vicious attack at home.

Paperback:

9780700611829, titled "Judging Jehovah's Witnesses: Religious Persecution and the Dawn of the Rights Revolution" | Reprint edition (Univ Pr of Kansas, February 1, 2002), cover price $19.95

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