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Download The Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968)
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The Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968) • Aimed at outlawing racial discrimination against AfricanAmericans and strengthening their voting rights in southern states • aims: – To outlaw racial discrimination against African-Americans – To strengthen their voting rights in southern states • Civil Rights Movement was followed by the, Black Power Movement (1966-1975), aimed at banning discrimination, strengthening voting rights and racial dignity, economic and political independence, freedom from oppression by whites The Civil Rights Movement • First attemps during the Second World War since the US fought for democracy abroad and treated blacks at home like second class citizens • Protesters stayed mostly non-violent, while law enforcement reacted violently and some protesters were killed • Integration of Central High School in Little Rock 1957 X Forms of protest and civil disobedience • Boycotts (eg: Montgomery Bus Boycott 1955-1956) X • Sit-ins (eg: Greensboro sit-in 1960: black students sat at the segregated lunch counter of a Woolworth store to protest their policy of excluding colored) Forms of Protest and civil disobedience • Marches (eg: Selma to Montgomery marches 1965: 600 people wanted to march from Selma to Montgomery, but were violently stopped by state troopers and local law enforcement) • strikes Legislative achievements • Brown v. Board of Education of 1954: rejected separate white and colored school systems X • Civil Rights Act of 1964: banned discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin in employment practices and public accommodations • Voting Rights Act of 1965: strengthened and protected voting rights • Immigration and Nationality Services Act of 1965: opened entry to the US to immigrants other than traditional European groups • Fair Housing Act of 1968: banned discrimination in sale or rental of housing Martin Luther King