Between 1969 and 1977, Morrison spent several terms as an instructor at Tougaloo College.[1] Upon receiving his PhD in 1977, he joined the faculty at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, moving in 1978 to Syracuse University.[1] In 1989 he moved to The University of Missouri, where he was Vice Provost of Minority Affairs and Faculty Developments until 1997, and from 2005 until 2008 held the Frederick Middlebush Chair.[1] In 2009 he became a professor at Mississippi State University, where he was also Head of the Department of Political Science and Public Administration, and affiliated with African American Studies. In 2016 he moved to the University of Delaware.[2]
Career
In addition to articles in academic journals, Morrison has published several books. In 1982 he published Ethnicity and Political Integration: The Case of Ashanti, Ghana, which arose from his 1977 PhD dissertation.[3] The book investigates the development in the early 1970s of regionalism and political integration in Ghana using four locations in Ghana's Ashanti Region.[3]
Morrison published a second book in 1989, called Black Political Mobilization, Leadership and Power. Morrison examines the effects of the Civil Rights Movement on the American political landscape of the 1980s, and particularly how mobilization of African-Americans that began in the Civil Rights Movement continued to influence political events through the following few decades.[4] The book studies this question using the cases of Bolton, Mississippi, Mayersville, Mississippi, and Tchula, Mississippi, three towns which had elected black mayors after being controlled entirely by white politicians since the Reconstruction era.[5]
In 2015, Morrison published a third, book, Aaron Henry of Mississippi: Inside Agitator.[6] The book is the first full biography of Aaron Henry, who was the president of the Mississippi section of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and a leader of the Freedom Summer.[7] The book focuses not just on Henry's role as an activists during the Civil Rights Movement, but also on his time as a more obscure activist and as an elected official, arguing that these experiences made Henry a usually effective activist during the Civil Rights Movement.[7] For this book, Morrison was awarded the Lillian Smith Book Award in 2016.[8][9] Morrison spoke about Aaron Henry of Mississippi in a forum on C-SPAN.[10]
In addition to authoring these books, Morrison was also the co-editor of the books Race and Democracy in the Americas: Brazil and the United States (2003) with David Covin and Michael Mitchell, and Housing and Urban Poor in Africa (1982) with Peter Gutkind.[1]
Together with Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Morrison won the 2015 Frank Johnson Goodnow Award from the American Political Science Association, a lifetime award that "honors service to the community of teachers, researchers, and public servants who work in the many fields of politics."[11] Morrison also won the Aaron Henry Lifetime Achievement Award from the Mississippi section of the NAACP.[8]
Selected works
Ethnicity and Political Integration: The Case of Ashanti, Ghana (1982)
Black Political Mobilization, Leadership and Power (1989)
Aaron Henry of Mississippi: Inside Agitator (2015)
Selected awards
Frank Johnson Goodnow Award, American Political Science Association (2015)[11]
^ abOwusu, Maxwell (1986). "Reviewed Work: Ethnicity and Political Integration: The Case of Ashanti, Ghana by Minion K. C. Morrison". Canadian Journal of African Studies. 20 (1): 129–130. doi:10.2307/484711. JSTOR484711.
^Morris, Aldon (May 1989). "Reviewed Work: Black Political Mobilization: Leadership, Power and Mass Behavior. by Minion K. C. Morrison". American Journal of Sociology. 94 (6): 1503–1504. doi:10.1086/229199.
^Hill, Rickey (May 1988). "Reviewed Work: Black Political Mobilization: Leadership, Power and Mass Behavior. by Minion K. C. Morrison". The Journal of Politics. 50 (2): 543–545. doi:10.2307/2131817. JSTOR2131817.
^ abDanielson, Chris (1 June 2016). "Reviewed work Aaron Henry of Mississippi: Inside Agitator". American Historical Review. 121 (3): 988. doi:10.1093/ahr/121.3.988.