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Unit 8 Content Review pg 33 - 37 CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.

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Presentation on theme: "Unit 8 Content Review pg 33 - 37 CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unit 8 Content Review pg 33 - 37 CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT

2 Civil Rights: TIMELINE – pg 33 Truman’s Executive Order 9981 (1948) – Desegregation of the Armed Forces Brown v. Board of Education Decision (1954) – Supreme Court decision to INTEGRATE SCHOOLS overturns Plessey V. Ferguson & ‘separate but equal’ Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955) Rosa Parks arrested for not giving up her seat on a bus in Montgomery Alabama – MLK’s first action as a civil rights leader was to organize a boycott of Montgomery’s public bus system until the city integrated them Civil Rights Act of 1957 – Intended to increase minority voter registration, it created the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Justice Department

3 Civil Rights: TIMELINE – pg 33 Integration of Little Rock High School in Arkansas (1957) – “Little Rock 9” students are escorted to class by federal troops to ensure integration (uphold Brown v. Board) Freedom Rides / Lunch Counter Sit-Ins (1960) – Methods of CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE used to expose segregation practices (JIM CROW LAWS) in the South MLK’s “I Have A Dream” Speech (1963) – At the culmination of the March on Washington, King gives a speech about his hopes for social equality. Civil Rights Act of 1964 – Passed by Johnson, this act ends segregation in all public places and private businesses.

4 Civil Rights: TIMELINE – pg 33 Voting Rights Act of 1965 – Passed by Johnson, it eliminates barriers to voting like poll taxes and literacy tests used in Southern States Freedom Summer Campaign to register minority voters in the South; predominantly in Mississippi. Affirmative Action (1965) – Part of Johnson’s Great Society, this program was set up to ensure minority citizens received equal opportunities and equal pay in the work place.

5 Leaders of the Civil Rights Movement pg 34 Rosa Parks – NAACP member who refused to give up her seat on a bus; leads to the Montgomery Bus Boycott Malcolm X – Activist who believes that violence was sometimes a necessary means to an end Thurgood Marshall – Lawyer in the Brown v. Board court case, and first African American Supreme Court Justice Martin Luther King Jr. & His Writings – Activist who believed in non-violence and civil disobedience to end inequality and discrimination – Letter from a Birmingham Jail -- why civil disobedience is the best method of protest – I Have a Dream -- hopes for equality in the future

6 Struggle for Equality – pg 35 Mexican Americans – The Chicano Movement began as a method of improving the conditions for migrant farm workers, but became a movement for equality – Leader = Cesar Chavez / U.F.W. (United Farm Workers) – Chicano Mural Movement = show/educate others about Hispanic culture and heritage American Indian Movement (AIM) – Native American movement to gain cultural acceptance and understanding.

7 Struggle for Equality – pg 35 Feminist Movement – Betty Friedan: Author of the Feminine Mystique; brought up the question of women’s happiness working in the home (“is there more?”) revived Women’s Rights Movement – Title IX: requires equal access and opportunities for women in schools receiving federal funding…usually sports related, but also any other academic programs or activities – Equal Pay Act: A law to require the equal pay of women for equal work when compared to their male counterparts Gay Rights Movement (Rainbow Coalition) – Homosexuals begin working to gain equal rights (and treatment) – Still struggle today for the right to marriage

8 Johnson’s Great Society Programs pg 36 Medicare Act of 1965 – Provides health care to people over the age of 65 “War on Poverty” – Programs created to train underprivileged youth and a domestic “Peace Corps” to help depressed areas Civil Rights Act of 1964 – Bans segregation in all public places and discrimination in hiring practices Voting Rights Act of 1965 – Removes barriers to voting (poll taxes & literacy tests) Affirmative Action – Created to ensure fair employment practices are applied to all races (pay, benefits, promotions, etc.)

9 Texas Civil Rights Court Cases – pg 37 Mendez v. Westminster ISD – Decision: Cannot segregate Mexican-Americans in schools Delgado v. Bastrop ISD – Decision: Cannot segregate Mexican-Americans in schools, – Hispanics are due protection under the 14th amendment Hernandez v. Texas – Decision: Hernandez had a right to trial by a jury of his “peers” –other Mexican Americans White v. Regester – Decision: election boundaries cannot be drawn to exclude the election of minority candidates Edgewood ISD v. Kirby – Decision: public schools must be funded equally by the state ( led to ‘ROBIN HOOD’ Plan )


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