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"I can't imagine that my children would have fewer rights, and less access to the safest, best health care."

"I can't imagine that my children would have fewer rights, and less access to the safest, best health care."

JAMES OAKES

James Oakes is one of the leading historians of nineteenth-century America. He holds a degree from Baruch College as well as M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of California, Berkeley. He has been on the faculty of the Graduate Center at City College since 1997 and the holder of the Graduate School Humanities Chair since 1998. Before coming to the Graduate Center, he taught at Princeton and Northwestern Universities. In a series of influential books and essays, he tackled the history of the United States from the Revolution through the Civil War. His early work focused on the South, examining slavery as an economic and social system that shaped Southern life. His books include The Ruling Race; Slavery and Freedom: An Interpretation of the Old South; The Radical and the Republican: Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, and the Triumph of Antislavery Politics; and Freedom National: The Destruction of Slavery in the United States, 1861–1865. The latter two garnered, respectively, the 2008 and 2013 Gilder Lehrman Lincoln Prize, an annual award for the finest scholarly work in English on Abraham Lincoln or the American Civil War era. His most recent book is The Crooked Path to Abolition: Abraham Lincoln and the Antislavery Constitution, published by W. W. Norton.

"I think we can predict that for a whole new generation of women, their ability to make their own decisions is no longer going to be theirs."

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