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16 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Discrimination
the use of any unreasonable and unjust criterion of exclusion. (page 157)
Civil rights
obligation imposed on government to take positive action to protect citizens from any illegal action of government agencies and of other private citizens. (page 157)
Equal protection clause
provision of the Fourteenth Amendment guaranteeing citizens 'the equal protection of the laws.' This clause has been the basis for the civil rights of African Americans, women, and other groups. (page 157)
Thirteenth Amendment
one of three Civil War amendments; it abolished slavery. (page 159)
Fourteenth Amendment
one of three Civil War amendments; it guaranteed equal protection and due process. (page 159)
Fifteenth Amendment
one of three Civil War amendments; it guaranteed voting rights for African American men. (page 159)
Jim Crow laws
laws enacted by southern states following Reconstruction that discriminated against African Americans. (page 160)
separate but equal rule
doctrine that public accommodations could be segregated by race but still be considered equal. (page 161)
Brown v. Board of Education
the 1954 Supreme Court decision that struck down the 'separate but equal' doctrine as fundamentally unequal. This case eliminated state power to use race as a criterion of discrimination in law and provided the national government with the power to intervene by exercising strict regulatory policies against discriminatory actions. (page 164)
Strict scrutiny
a test used by the Supreme Court in racial discrimination cases and other cases involving civil liberties and civil rights that places the burden of proof on the government rather than on the challengers to show that the law in question is constitutional. (page 165)
De jure
literally, 'by law'; refers to legally enforced practices, such as school segregation in the South before the 1960s. (page 165)
De facto
literally, 'by fact'; refers to practices that occur even when there is no legal enforcement, such as school segregation in much of the United States today. (page 165)
Gerrymandering
the apportionment of voters in districts in such a way as to give unfair advantage to one racial or ethnic group or political party. (page 173)
Redlining
a practice in which banks refuse to make loans to people living in certain geographic locations. (page 175)
Intermediate scrutiny
a test used by the Supreme Court in gender discrimination cases that places the burden of proof partially on the government and partially on the challengers to show that the law in question is unconstitutional. (page 178)
Affirmative action
government policies or programs that seek to redress past injustices against specified groups by making special efforts to provide members of those groups with access to educational and employment opportunities. (page 190)