Warmup In terms of political science what is a minority?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Extending Rights to All present What documents and institutions protect the rights of Americans?
Advertisements

Chapter 5 Civil Rights Legal basis for civil rights Enforcing the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment Critical Supreme Court ruling in the battle.
The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
The Struggle for Civil Rights. A Brief History of Civil Rights to the 1950s 1863: Lincoln issued Emancipation Proclamation, ending slavery in the South.
Part III: Extending Equal Rights to All Citizens present.
 Civil Rights  Definition: policies designed to protect people against arbitrary or discriminatory treatment by government officials or individuals 
 How does the Constitution protect our basic rights?
 How does the Constitution protect our basic rights?  Freedom of Speech.
Unit 5 p. 195 How does the Constitution protect our basic rights?
Vocabulary. Policies designed to protect people against arbitrary or discriminatory treatment by government officials or individuals.
Minority Movements: The Civil Rights Movement. Civil War: Results  13 th Amendment: 1865 – President Andrew Johnson  Abolished Slavery  14 th Amendment.
What you need: -Reading on civil rights movement and 13 th -15 th amendments -A new Word file, saved as “civil rights milestones”
CIVIL RIGHTS. Civil Rights  Slavery, Missouri Compromise  Dred Scott(1856)  Civil War  Post Civil War Amendments  Reconstruction, 1877 Compromise,
Chapter 4 Civil rights. The Civil Rights Struggle: After the Civil War, African Americans routinely faced discrimination, or unfair treatment based on.
CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT. 14 th Amendment Purpose was to make sure that southern states were treating freed slaves equally under the law. Incorporated the.
Laws Support Civil Rights Summarize the cause for passage and the effects of passing civil rights and voting rights legislation, including the 24 th Amendment.
LEHHS FOCUS: Lawyer Reconstruction to the Rise of Railroads.
Civil Rights and Civil Liberties. What are civil rights and what are civil liberties? Civil Rights = The right of every person to equal protection under.
Civil Rights and Civil Liberties. What are civil rights and what are civil liberties? Civil Rights = The right of every person to equal protection under.
The Struggle for Equality. Path to Abolishing Slavery The Constitutional Convention would have failed without a compromise on slavery. Counted slaves.
Early Civil Rights Amendments and Court Cases. Reconstruction Era 13 th Amendment: Ended slavery 14 th Amendment: Extended citizenship to African-Americans,
Civil Rights Events & Legislation. Dred Scott (1857): Declared African-Americans were not and could never become citizens of the United States Plessy.
THE ONGOING STRUGGLE… CIVIL RIGHTS. Protecting people against discrimination by the government and/or people. Amendment XIV (1868): equal protection of.
1 African American Voting Rights : The 15th Amendment Reconstruction Era
Civil Rights “… all men are created equal”. Segregation  De jure segregation Jim Crow Laws  De facto segregation.
EVENTS & RESULTS of the CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT ( )
Mt8: The Civil Rights Movement
Chapter 11: Civil Rights. The Constitution is designed to guarantee basic civil rights to everyone. The meaning of civil rights has changed over time,
Chapter 4 Civil rights. The Civil Rights Struggle: After the Civil War, African Americans routinely faced discrimination, or unfair treatment based on.
Industrial Revolution
Unit 2B Grudgeball. Limit  Does the 4 th amendment extend or limit the power of the government?
Civil Rights Vocab. Black Power African American movement seeking unity and self- reliance.
Amendment Review 1st Amendment 2nd Amendment
The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
Chapter 4 Civil rights.
Chapter 11: Civil Rights Section 2: Equal Justice Under Law (pgs
Chapter 5 Civil Rights Minorities have always struggled for civil rights in America. Question: Which branch of government should be accountable for making.
Civil Rights Ch. 4.4.
Powers and privileges guaranteed to individuals by government.
Civil Rights 1960’s Chapter 27.
Lesson 20: How Has the Right to Vote Been Expanded since the Adoption of the Constitution?
Civil Rights Civil rights is the Idea that government should protect from discrimination based upon race, gender, religion and sex The rights and privileges.
Industrial Revolution
SOL REVIEW African-American History
Chapter 7 Our Enduring Constitution
Civil Rights Movement.
The Struggle for Civil Rights
Civil Rights Movement:
Ch. 5 Vocabulary Review – AP Government
Partner Discussion In terms of political science what is a minority?
Chapter 29.1 Civil Rights in the 1960s.
Civil Rights and Equality
Civil Rights.
Bell ringer #13 Describe how right to vote (suffrage) is a fundamental right to the United States’s survival as a Republic. 2-3 lines.
Civil Rights Fighting For Equality
BQ 2 What do we call powers exclusive to the federal government?
Industrial Revolution
Civil Rights Equality of rights for persons regardless of race, sex, or ethnic background.
Ch. 21—Equality Under the Law
Chapter 11: Civil Rights Under the united states constitution, Americans have both rights and responsibilities.
Focus Question: What role did the federal government play in the Civil Rights Movement? Do Now: Answer questions 1-2 on today’s handout.
2.3 In terms of political science what is a minority?
The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
Civil Rights: Equality Under the Law Ch. 21
Roots of the Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights.
Civil Rights and Minority Politics
Anti Slavery Amendments
Civil Rights “Equal Protection”.
Segregation And Discrimination
Presentation transcript:

Warmup In terms of political science what is a minority? How does being a minority impact ones political participation and efficacy? C) Why has the nation become more diverse since the 1950s. D) How have the nation’s politics become more inclusive. How are the still exclusive.

Civil Rights and Minority Politics

I. Minorities In political terms a minority group is a group that lacks political power. (may or may not be a numerical minority) The 1787 Constitution was explicitly intended not to apply to Blacks and Indians. -What evidence supports this? 3/5 compromise, 20 year ban on abolition of slavery. Citizenship being left up to the states. Citizenship of free blacks was debatable. 14th Amendment Native Americans were still not considered citizens. 1884 Cherokee Nation v. Georgia. The Supreme Court still refused to recognize the citizenship of native Americans. Native Americans do not become citizens until 1924.

I. Minorities In political terms a minority group is a group that lacks political power. (may or may not be a numerical minority) The 1787 Constitution was explicitly intended not to apply to Blacks and Indians. -What evidence supports this? 3/5 compromise, 20 year ban on abolition of slavery. Citizenship being left up to the states. Citizenship of free blacks was debatable. 14th Amendment Native Americans were still not considered citizens. 1884 Cherokee Nation v. Georgia. The Supreme Court still refused to recognize the citizenship of native Americans. Native Americans do not become citizens until 1924. C. Dred Scott v. Sanford. Slaves are not citizens and not entitled to the protections in the Constitution.

D) The equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment provides the basis of the Civil Rights Movement. 1. Despite its passage many states continued to practice de jure and de facto segregation. 2. In Plessey v. Ferguson the Supreme Court ruled that Separate but equal was not a violation of the 14th Amendment.

II. African Americans Although the Supreme Court made several favorable decisions in the 1940s and 1950s the other branches of government were not enforcing them. Because minority groups lacked access to the agenda setting process they had to create events to force the other branches to act. Examples: Montgomery Bus Boycotts, The Freedom Rides, Birmingham boycotts and protest, Little Rock Nine.

C) The federal Courts were the most aggressive part of government supporting civil rights. Examples: Brown v. Board of Education Browder v. Gayle Why did the Courts act first?

C) The federal Courts were the most aggressive part of government supporting civil rights. Examples: Brown v. Board of Education Browder v. Gayle Why did the Courts act first? How did these ruling impact federalism?

D. Results of Movement Civil Rights Act of 1964- Ended discrimination in “public” facilities. Voting Rights Act of 1965- Created federal oversight of elections in states with a history of disenfranchisement. Civil Rights Act of 1968- made discriminatory practices in real estate illegal. * Shelby County V Holder (2013)- The Supreme Court voted in a 5-4 decision that the formula used to determine which precincts need federal oversight is out of date and can longer be used. There will be no more federal oversight unless Congress develops a new formula. Since the ruling several states have moved to adopt voter ID laws.

III. Women Seneca Falls Convention (1848) 1. Beginning of the fight for equality a. The Declaration of Sentiments and resolutions for women’s rights B. 19th Amendment (1920)- Enfranchised women.

B. In the 1960s the movement gained momentum. 1 B. In the 1960s the movement gained momentum. 1. The Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) passed Congress but failed to be ratified by 3/4 the states. 2. NOW (National Organization for Women) became a powerful interest group.

3) Equal pay act of 1963 required employers to pay men and women the same wage for doing the same job. 4) Lilly Ledbetter Act- Allows lawsuits to be filed against employers when discrimination occurred regardless of when the discrimination first happened.