No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 April 2005
This symposium stemmed from a 2002 panel at the APSA Annual Meeting in Boston, MA. Thepanel discussed the major professional contributions of several political scientists whograduated between 1935 and 1955. They attended graduate school during “separate but equal”in many Southern states. Yet, they achieved and made major contributions at many black andwhite universities. Many black students were motivated to study political science, entergraduate school, and pursue a pivotal career in political science and law. The preponderanceof these early political scientists was employed at black or African-American universities.They established strong programs at these institutions and encouraged students to pursuedegrees in political science and law.