Causes of the Civil Rights Movement Essay

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    The meaning of the Civil Rights Movement was to establish equality for African Americans, and Blacks in the United States. Martin Luther King Jr and Malcolm X were two African American leaders of the Civil Rights Movement. They both instilled respect, pride, and religion into black community. Their leadership was to promise African Americans and Blacks through the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments equality and justice. In addition to their leadership, Dr. King and Malcolm X were involved in…

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    Landmark judicial decisions and a now famous bus boycott resulted in the civil rights movement gaining unprecedented strength and momentum in southern states in the 1950s. In 1954, with Thurgood Marshall of the NAACP arguing on behalf of the plaintiffs, the Supreme Court ruled in the case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka that the segregation of public facilities was unconstitutional. In 1955, the Court ordered the desegregation of public schools, though it did not set a deadline for this…

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    She was seen marching alongside Martin during his fights for equality, and knew that he was very much in love with her. However, she also was a very determined Civil Rights leader by her own right. It was her who continue the Civil Rights Movement after her husband’s assassination, and her who continued to fight for her own causes. These causes included equality for all, regardless of race, gender, or sexual preference. She changed just as many lives through her determination, perseverance, and…

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    history and civil rights goes, the education system should not teach us that black and white racism was the only issue at the time. In fact, schools managed to ignore the civil rights struggle involving Mexican Americans, Asians, LGBT community etc. I became heavily interested in this topic my first semester here at state once I took a latino studies course where we touched bases on the Chicano movement that occurred in the 1960’s and 1970’s. Growing up Chicano this issue and movement hit home…

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    Identity-based social movements have generated many times across different regions of the world. These movements have helped bring social, political and structural changes and have led to different types of political outcomes. For example, in the case of the former Soviet Union, policy change leading to the fall of the U.S.S.R in the early 1990s, the marginalization of minorities by the State of Mississippi in the 1960s during the Civil Rights movements, or perhaps the case of Nazi Germany’s…

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    time was the catalyst to the movement that is known as Black Lives Matter. Black Lives Matter is a social movement with the intention of bringing awareness to unjust events that happen within the POC (people of color) community. In 2012, BLM didn’t have proper media coverage, so people were unaware that a movement was brewing. Now looking at it 4 years later, Black Lives Matter is a large and active movement. Every time a person of color is killed with an unjust cause as to why, Black…

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    During Reconstruction, the period following the Civil War, federal troops occupied parts of the South to maintain order and ensure the rights of African Americans. Congress established the Freedmen 's Bureau to help former slaves and enacted some legal protections for African Americans. In 1868, the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified, guaranteeing citizenship and legal equality to all people born in the United States, including former slaves, and in 1870, the Fifteenth…

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    the history about civil rights and what benefits they had, but also how there is still animus towards it today. Martin Luther King Jr. led the civil rights movement in the 1960s and ultimately lost his life fighting for what he thought what was right. In the end African Americans got the rights they deserved because of his actions. These rights led to higher test scores and higher graduation rates for Africans. But, people have not accepted the fact that they have gotten their rights because of…

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    abolitionist movement was gaining momentum, especially in the North. As a young adult, Grimke left her luxurious life in the South and moved to the North to fight for civil rights. She quickly became one of the most revolutionary abolitionists of the time. Throughout her time in the public eye, she fought on the side of a multitude causes. Grimke was an advocate for civil rights, suffrage, and the women's rights movement. Nevertheless, her main work was in service to the abolitionist movement.…

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    would argue a government’s primary function is to serve it’s citizens. The questions arises when said government fails to adhere to the will of the people. Do citizens then have a right to disobey the law of the land? 19th century poet, naturalist, and philosopher Henry David Thoreau believed so, in an essay he titled Civil Disobedience. Thoreau believed peaceful and nonviolent protest was the most effective way to display displeasure at the rule of government. Plenty of other great minds have…

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