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A Time to Lose : Representing Kansas in Brown V. Board of Education - Paul E. Wilson

A Time to Lose

Representing Kansas in Brown V. Board of Education

By: Paul E. Wilson

Hardcover | 1 March 1995

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This thoughtful and engaging memoir opens up a previously hidden side to what many consider the most important Supreme Court decision of the twentieth century. With quiet candor Paul Wilson reflects upon his role as the Kansas assistant attorney general assigned "to defend the indefensible"—the policy of "separate but equal" that was overturned on May 17, 1954, by Linda Brown's precedent-shattering suit.

The Brown decision ended legally sanctioned racial segregation in our nation's public schools, expanded the constitutional concepts of equal protection and due process of law, and in many ways launched the modern civil rights movement. Since that time, it has been cited by appellate courts in thousands of federal and state cases, analyzed in thousands of books and articles, and remains a cornerstone of law school education.

Wilson reminds us that Brown was not one case but four-including similar cases in South Carolina, Virginia, and Delaware-and that it was only a quirk of fate that brought this young lawyer to center stage at the Supreme Court. But the Kansas case and his own role, he argues, were different from the others in significant ways. His recollections reveal why.

Recalling many events known only to Brown insiders, Wilson re-creates the world of 1950s Kansas, places the case in the context of those times and politics, provides important new information about the state's ambivalent defense, and then steps back to suggest some fundamental lessons about his experience, the evolution of race relations, and the lawyer's role in the judicial resolution of social conflict.

Throughout these reflections Wilson's voice shines through with sincerity, warmth, and genuine humility. Far from a self-serving apology by one of history's losers, his memoir reminds us once again that there are good people on every side of the issues that divide us and that truth and meaning are not the special preserve of history's winners.
Industry Reviews
A beautifully conceived memoir of the young and inexperienced attorney general who was called upon to represent the state of Kansas on the losing side of Brown.--Washington Post Book World

Those interested in school desegregation, constitutional history, and the judicial process should read this book.--Review of Politics

Well written and illustrated with superb attention to detail, while being comprehensible to the non-legal mind, this book is a must read for historians, educators, sociologists, political scientists, civil rights activists, members of the bar, pre-law students, criminal justice majors, and others who simply wish to become informed about on of the landmark United States Supreme Court decisions of our time.--Journal of the West

Wilson contributes to a more complete understanding of how Brown evolved and how the case was perceived by members of the Supreme Court. . . . Four decades after standing to defend the right of Kansas to separate school children according to the color of their skin, but holding up his own experience as a compass Wilson now rises instead to impress upon his readers the necessity of an active, searching, and affirmative attention to remaining injustices.--American Journal of Legal History

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