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Red Monday and Beyond
by
Marjorie Heins
in
academic freedom
/ Earl Warren
/ History of Law
/ judicial retrenchment
/ loyalty oaths
/ loyalty programs
/ Paul Sweezy
/ Raphael Konigsberg
/ Red Monday
/ Rudolph Schware
/ Supreme Court
2013
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Do you wish to request the book?
Red Monday and Beyond
by
Marjorie Heins
in
academic freedom
/ Earl Warren
/ History of Law
/ judicial retrenchment
/ loyalty oaths
/ loyalty programs
/ Paul Sweezy
/ Raphael Konigsberg
/ Red Monday
/ Rudolph Schware
/ Supreme Court
2013
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Book Chapter
Red Monday and Beyond
2013
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Overview
The Supreme Court took cautious steps in the mid-1950s toward dismantling loyalty programs. In 1955, it overturned the federal Loyalty Review Board’s blacklisting of a Yale professor of medicine who had been a consultant to the Public Health Service, but it ruled on technical grounds and avoided the constitutional question of whether loyalty boards could use evidence from secret informants, evidence that the employee could not see and therefore try to discredit or rebut. The justices had left that question hanging since their deadlock over Dorothy Bailey’s firing from her federal job four years before.¹ Justice William O. Douglas wanted
Publisher
NYU Press
Subject
ISBN
9780814790519, 0814790518
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