Law

Oliver Brown, the civil rights activist

Oliver Brown
— This upcoming video may not be available to view yet.

Sharing a name with someone is usually unremarkable. Sharing it with the plaintiff in a landmark Supreme Court case is rather less so. I have Googled myself since before Google was even a thing, so I have known about Oliver Leon Brown for a while.

Oliver Leon Brown

Oliver Leon Brown was a welder and part-time minister in Topeka, Kansas. In 1950, the local NAACP recruited him as one of thirteen parents to sue the Topeka Board of Education over racial segregation in the city’s public elementary schools. His daughter Linda was among the children denied entry to the nearest white school.

The case made its way to the Supreme Court, consolidated with four similar cases from other states. Brown happened to be first alphabetically, so it became Oliver L. Brown et al. v. the Board of Education of Topeka.

The former Monroe Elementary School in Topeka, Kansas, now the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site
The former Monroe Elementary School, Topeka, Kansas (now a National Historic Site). Photo by Midwest National Parks, CC BY 2.0.

The decision

Eventually the court ruled unanimously on 17 May 1954 in favour of the plaintiffs, overturning the “separate but equal” doctrine established by Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896, holding that racially separate schools were inherently unequal and unconstitutional.

The Monroe School

The Monroe Elementary School, one of the four segregated Black schools and Linda Brown’s own, is now the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site. Oliver’s family founded the Brown Foundation in 1988 to preserve the case’s legacy.

Finding a historical figure who shares your name is not particularly surprising (especially with my surname). Finding one whose name is on a case that changed American constitutional law is. If I ever find myself in Topeka, I will certainly visit the historic site.

Habeas Corpus

Oliver Brown
— This upcoming video may not be available to view yet.

First, read this blog post.

A law has almost been passed in a the United States (the Military Commissions Act of 2006, passed by Congress on September 27 - just needs signing by Bush) that allows aliens to be detained indefinitely without access to legal counsel and without even having anyone notified of their detention simply by having been declared an enemy combatant. And this declaration in itself doesn’t require any serious evidence and has no serious oversight (meaning in reality it requires no evidence).

So the War on Terror apparently isn’t a fight for freedom…

Interesting, I first read it on XML.com which has more detail.