"How did the civil rights movement address the failures of reconstruction" Essays and Research Papers

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    After the last battle of the American Civil war‚ the fate of the confederate states remained uncertain. The actions taken were to readmit the former confederate states and allow for the building of the southern economy and society. In a word this was reconstruction; putting back the shattered fragments of the union. Ultimately‚ reconstruction failed and the reasons for this failure are numerous. They include widespread corruption‚ white supremacy being allowed to dominate the south‚ entrenched racist

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    conflicts caused the emergence of Civil Rights Movements aimed to end segregation of the race‚ sexuality and gender. Every civil rights movement experiences oppression or adversity derived from the leader of the society they are protesting. Lyndon B Johnson‚ Ronald Reagan‚ and other presidents of the United States were primarily hostile towards Civil Rights proposals and as a result they created a society‚ or country that served those like the president‚ and did not allow room for diversity. Most

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    everyone might have a different perspective or view of what is right and what necessities to change. That is how history works people decide what they would like to change and do everything they can so later generations are different. Change comes from individuals who believe something needs to be different. Individuals who want to make a difference will make it their “mission to do something.”

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    The movement was not started by blacks alone‚ but also by whites who wanted to end the generation after generation of violence amongst the races. In order to bring the two races closer together the Civil Rights Movement held non violent protest first to promote nonviolence among the races. This idea was first introduced through one of the movements’ most famous leaders Dr. Martin Luther King and the teaching he received from

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    Civil Rights Museum The Civil Rights Movements are a big part of U.S. history. It ”was a social‚ political‚ and economic revolution in which Africa Americans fought against racial segregation and discrimination rooted in the days of slavery.” (Riggs 2nd ed Vol. 1) It shows that Americans fight for what they believe in despite people’s opposing opinions. These movements include fighting for African American’s rights‚ women’s rights‚ the mentally ill‚ and prison reforms. Each of these reforms show

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    Slavery in America was the root of African Americans being denied their civil rights. When slavery was abolished in 1865‚ Southern states failed to recognise African American civil rights and even enforced laws of segregation‚ known as ‘Jim Crow’ laws. These laws included segregation of public facilities and transport‚ separate schools and libraries‚ and inter-racial marriage of black and white people was forbidden. It was extremely difficult for African American’s to try and obtain justice‚ because

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    the 1960’s‚ African Americans rose up and fought for what was rightfully theirs during the civil rights movement. Living in the twenty first century we see that it inhumane to strip African Americans of their human rights. But‚ sadly‚ we have neglected to see that homosexuals are in a very similar position today. Homosexuals in the United States have been fighting for their rights for years‚ but the right to be legally married is the hardest fight of them all. Marriage is a rite of passage in the

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    Klux Klan‚ used violence and intimidation in order to avert blacks from associating with whites socially‚ from voting‚ and even progressing financially. Civil rights activists‚ such as Maritn Luther King Jr.‚ sought to put an end to such discrimination. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.‚ a leader of manifold nonviolent protests during the Civil Rights Era‚ was said to be the "single most important figure in the African American community’s struggle

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    the war‚ there was the Watts Riots‚ the North East blackout and before just the year before that‚ on July 2nd the civil right act of 1964 was signed which put into law that segregation as illegal but ironically the Jim crow laws remained in effect. However‚ the major event that year was the racial violence between blacks and white that erupted in Selma Alabama. The voter’s rights movement‚ to sum up was when blacks marched out to Edmund Pettus Bridge‚ when they got there they were greeted by a wall

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    Amendment. This ruling paved the way for the Civil Rights Movement. The catalyst for this change was a third grade‚ Topeka‚ Kansas student named Linda Brown‚ whose desire was to attend a school that was closer to her home‚ but which happened to be white. In this report‚ I will take a look at the case‚ how it changed the education system of the United States‚ then determine if it is still effective after fifty-four years. The Civil Rights Movement

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