- Clarence Clyde Ferguson Jr.
Infobox Person
name = C. Clyde Ferguson Jr.
image_size =
caption =
birth_date =4 November 1924
birth_place =Wilmington, North Carolina
death_date =21 December 1983
death_place =Boston, Massachusetts
occupation = Professor of law, diplomat
spouse = Dolores ZimmermanClarence Clyde Ferguson Jr. (1924-1983) was a professor of law and an
United States Ambassador to Uganda .Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007]Having experienced the horrors of
World War II , as adiplomat he "labored tirelessly to safeguard and extend the fundamental freedoms" essential toworld peace . He was the main proponent in many decisions implementing the social provisions of theU.N. Charter and theUniversal Declaration of Human Rights , particularly in relation toapartheid , and more generally in relation to all forms of racial, religious, and culturaldiscrimination . Ferguson was the chief draftsman of theUnited Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization 's statement on race in 1967 and is considered the "founding father " ofaffirmative action .In 1969, he served as the U.S. ambassador-at-large and coordinator for civilian relief in the
Nigerian civil war and negotiated the "Protocol on Relief to Nigeria Civilian Victims of the Civil War." He served as ambassador toUganda in 1970 and as deputy assistant secretary of state forAfrica n affairs in 1973. From 1973 to 1975 he was the U.S. representative to theUnited Nations Economic and Social Council .Ferguson held a professorship at
Rutgers University and served as dean of theHoward University School of Law from 1963 to 1969. He joined the faculty ofHarvard Law School in 1976 and worked there until his death. The "C. Clyde Ferguson Annual Lecture" at Howard Law School is named after him, [cite web
url=http://www.law.howard.edu/1060
title=Clarence Clyde Ferguson Jr. Annual Lecture
publisher=Howard University School of Law
date=2007-10-17
accessdate=2007-10-19] as is the "Clyde Ferguson award" presented by theAssociation of American Law Schools . [cite web
url=http://www.law.georgetown.edu/news/releases/january.10b.2005.html
title=Professor Emma Coleman Jordan Wins 2005 Clyde Ferguson Award
publisher=Georgetown Law
date=2005-01-10
accessdate=2007-10-19]He wrote books including "Materials on Trial Presentations" and "Racism in American Education", and contributed to "U.S. Ratification of the Human Rights Treaties".
Personal life
He was the son of Clarence Clyde (a minister) and Georgena (Owens) Ferguson. He was a
Unitarian Universalist . He married Dolores Zimmerman, now deceased, on14 February ,1954 . Together they had three children.Education
He received a
Bachelor of Arts degree (cum laude ) fromOhio State University in 1948, and aBachelor of Law degree (cum laude) from Harvard University in 1951. He was awarded aDoctor of Law degree by Rutgers University in 1966, and again byWilliams College in 1976.Other career events
He served in the
U.S. Army from 1943 to 1946. taking part in theBattle of Normandy and the fighting in Europe that followed.cite journal
last = Dejean
first = Joseph L.
year = 1984
month = April
title = Humanist and Humanitarian
journal = Harvard Law Review
volume = Vol. 97
issue = No. 6
pages = pp. 1262–1263
location = Cambridge, Massachusetts] He received a Bronze Star. He worked on the legal defense team of theNational Association for the Advancement of Colored People . He served as president of theAmerican Society of International Law from 1978 to 1980.cite web
url=http://www.asil.org/aboutasil/presidents/FergusonCC.html
title=Clarence Clyde Ferguson Jr.
publisher=American Society of International Law]Bibliography
* (With Albert P. Blaustein) "Desegregation and the Law: The Meaning and Effect of the School Segregation Cases", Rutgers University Press, 1957, 2nd edition, 1960.
* "Materials on Trial Presentations", Rutgers University, 1957.
* "Enforcement and Collection of Judgments and Liens", Institute for Continuing Legal Education, Rutgers University, 1961.
* "Secured Transactions: Article IX Uniform Commercial Code in New Jersey", Sooney & Sage, 1961.
* (With others) "Racism in American Education", Random House, 1970.
* (Contributor) Lillich, editor, "U.S. Ratification of the Human Rights Treaties", University of Virginia Press, 1981.References
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