Often partners with other groups involved in the
civil rights movement, the SRC used
communications and
analysis to try to reach people through facts and education. It published literature related to racial justice, released studies on
race relations, and acted as a
think tank for issues concerning the movement.
Publications Since 1944, the SRC has published some form of journal. The Council's first publication,
Southern Frontier, had been published by the Commission on Interracial Cooperation from January 1940 until February 1944
. The SRC continued publishing
Southern Frontier from March 1944 to December 1945 before reformatting and renaming the publication as
New South. In 1974,
New South and a companion tabloid
South Today were merged into a color glossy magazine,
Southern Voices. This published for ten months but ceased because of financial issues. The SRC journal
Southern Changes was published between 1978 and 2003.
Emory University, in partnership with the
Library of Congress, has digitally preserved the journal, described as "an alternative and groundbreaking news outlet for stories on social justice in the South." The Council publishes various issues briefs, position papers, and legislative reviews, including the annuals
Southern States Legislative Review and
State of the South Report.
Voter Education Project working on a voter education project at the Southern Regional Council in 1967. The SRC served as a liaison between a number of southern organizations and northern foundations, providing resources and opportunities for mutual understanding. The organization created the
Voter Education Project (VEP), building on an idea from U.S. Attorney General
Robert F. Kennedy during the
Kennedy administration; the project was run by the SRC from its inception on April 1, 1962, until it was made an independent organization on June 1, 1971. The VEP did not actually register voters; instead, it acted as a conduit between
philanthropic grants and civil rights organizations conducting
voter registration drives or voting-related research. For example, the VEP funded voter-registration work by the
National Urban League; in October 1962, the Jefferson County (Alabama) Voters Campaign received assistance with a registration effort from the League.
Lillian Smith Book Award The
Lillian Smith Book Award was established by the SRC in 1968, shortly after writer
Lillian Smith died, to "recognize authors whose writing extends the legacy of this outspoken writer, educator and social critic who challenged her fellow Southerners and all Americans on issues of social and racial justice." ==Georgia Council on Human Relations==