"The civil rights movement 1930 1960" Essays and Research Papers

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    Civil Rights

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    Chapter 5 Review Questions 1. Civil Rights are the government-protected rights of individuals against arbitrary or discriminatory treatment by governments or individuals. The concept of equality got introduced into the constitution. The 14th Amendment‚ one of three Civil war Amendments ratified from 1865 to 1870‚ introduced the notion of equality into the constitution by specifying that a state could not deny “any person within jurisdiction equal protection of the laws.” It is evident in the recent

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    The Civil Rights Movement is very important. It was very important because after the Civil War Jim Crow laws were put in place. Dr. Martin Luther King contributed to the movement and Rosa Parks was arrested for sitting down on a bus. The Civil Rights Movement was very important. The Civil Rights movement was very important‚ because after the Civil War Jim Crow laws were put in place. Jim Crow laws were based on race‚ and they were not official laws. An example of a Jim Crow law was one in Florida

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    Clayborne Carson‚ Carson discusses the civil rights movement. Carson discusses how the nonviolent protest‚ the civil rights movement of the 1950s and ’60s broke the pattern of public facilities’ being segregated by “race” in the South and achieved the most important breakthrough in equal-rights legislation for African Americans since the Reconstruction period (1865–77). Carson uses examples of people and protests through out the era of the civil rights movement be achieved. Back in the early to late

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    freedom out of enslavement‚ to fighting for the right to sit next to a white man on the bus‚ these belittled people have relentless been pushed down when trying to stand up. However‚ slowly they rose up and fought for equal rights‚ all the while facing mass resistance. During the Civil Rights movement‚ African Americans made many advances in their plight for social‚ economic‚ and political freedom; such include the Civil Rights Act of 1964‚ the Voting Rights Act of 1965‚ and school integration. Although

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    Being a prominent leader during the Civil Rights movement was a perilous position to occupy. Very few people have the guts to make themselves the face of a movement‚ and even fewer succeed at it. Ralph Abernathy was an American Civil Rights activist who advocated equality alongside Martin Luther King Jr. and many others. Ralph Abernathy strived to help establish a more equal and welcoming America for all. Abernathy went on a journey to help change the way America is today and help create a more equal

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    Malcolm X played a major part in the start of the Australian Civil Rights movement through his involvement in the civil rights movement in the USA between 1952 and 1965. He influenced Australia by sharing similar ideas and goals with the aboriginal people of Australia‚ he helped Indigenous Australians stand up to discrimination by inspiring them through his speeches and self- assertion and self-identity. Malcolm X believed in the “Black Power” philosophy and the teachings of major black power organisations

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    Eyes on the Prize This video talks about the times during the civil rights movement. It further explains the hardships the African American race went through during that time. Segregation was the biggest problem at that time. During the civil rights movement‚ black people faced segregation‚ uniting as one to fight for a similar prize‚ and successfully attaining that prize. During the Civil Rights Movement‚ black people faced segregation. Black people were discriminated against just because

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    unalienable right to free speech. The American Republic was conceived in revolution and resistance to legislature. A plethora of the original framers of the Constitution were soldiers and essential leaders of the American Revolution; these citizens fought for our new Republic during the war and absorbed its political ideology. The Declaration of Independence‚ brought to life by Thomas Jefferson‚ said that the document was simply an "expansion of the American mind." He wrote that it is the "Right of the

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    " The citizens of the United Sates of America have the right to protest enshrined to them in the 1st Amendment of our great constitution. Throughout history many have felt that the government has not had the peoples best interest in mind and have united peacefully to bring about change. These movements include the great Boston Tea Party‚ the Women’s Suffrage Movement‚ and never could we forget Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.`s Civil Rights Movement. The Boson Tea Party‚ a mass protest on December 16th

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    Primarily‚ a major factor in the success of the movement for equality was the strategy of protesting for justice without using any forms of violence. Some examples includes: rallies‚ vigils‚ boycotts‚ sit-ins and many more. During his speech delivered in accepting the Nobel prize for peace‚ Reverend leader of the civil rights movement‚ Martin Luther King believes in a peaceful protest could change the mentality of our time. This particular belief was inspired by the teaching of the Indian leader

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