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    1. The reason why the colored American is not in the world's Columbian exposition: the Afro-American's

      This pamphlet, published by Wells, protests the exclusion of African Americans from the 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago and urges a (...)

    2. An extraordinary week - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      These scholars, remember, are at the core of the boycott directed at Elsevier that has been gaining momentum for over a month and is (...)

    3. Small steps - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      And even groups are free to boycott when the issues on which they want to put pressure are not price related, as in the Cost of (...)

    4. University Archives - Food History at the Rubenstein Library - LibGuides at Duke University

      The collection, for example, contains materials detailing food and labor-related boycotts such as the "Lettuce Boycott" in 1972. Eating (...)

    5. Rubenstein Library - Food Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Why, What and How We Eat - LibGui

      "Ted" Minah Records and Papers,1941-1975 and undated : Minah was Director of Duke University Dining Halls from 1946-1974 Student Organizations (...)

    6. Recorded Stories of America's Jim Crow Past Now Available - Duke University Libraries Blogs

      Wilson recollected the start of the seven-week boycott in a July 1995 interview with a Duke student, but her story never made the (...)

    7. Stepping back from sharing - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Pingback: Régression du partage | Réseau AO Toulouse Pingback: Elsevier’s new sharing policy harmful to authors and access to scholarly research (...)

    8. A Sermon: Moral Crisis in a Troubled South (1956) - Bitstreams: The Digital Collections Blog

      The sermon speaks directly to the state of race relations in the South in 1955 amid civil rights unrest related to the Montgomery Bus (...)

    9. A vexing question - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      This is not a cartel or a boycott, but I encourage other library administrators to adopt a similar policy.

    10. Who do you work for, faculty author? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Post navigation Previous Post Losing our focus Next Post Why boycott Elsevier? 11 thoughts on “Who do you work for, faculty author?”

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