Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 1975
The Contract Buyers League (C.B.L.), a group of middle-aged black people claiming to have been over-charged and exploited in the purchase of their homes, emerged on Chicago's west side during the winter of 1967-68. From 1968 to 1971 C.B.L. gained considerable publicity and support for its claims by the use of such tactics as picketing, withholding housing payments, and resisting attempts at eviction. In addition, the members of C.B.L. have had a complicated set of encounters with the legal system which continue at the time of writing (August 1974). This paper uses the most significant of these encounters to explore in a more theoretical way certain aspects of litigation involving poor and minority groups.
This paper is based upon my unpublished Ph.D. dissertation which was submitted to Northwestern University in 1972. This study was made possible by a Russell Sage Foundation residency fellowship. The cooperation of many members of the Contract Buyers Leaque and their advisors and lawyers is gratefully acknowledged, as is the collaboration of James Alan McPherson, and the encouragement of Richard Schwartz.