Separate-but-Equal AP Government 2012.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Civil Rights Movement. What is the Civil Rights Movement?
Advertisements

Chapter 29 Taking on Segregation.
Legal Background of Civil Rights. Equal Protection Clause 14 th Amendment of the Constitution (1868)  “no state shall make or enforce any law which shall.
THE MODERN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT Taking a walk With Civil Rights Leaders and established laws for African Americans and Women.
CHAPTER 11 CIVIL RIGHTS Equal Justice Under the Law Section 2.
Civil Rights Identify the Plessy v. Ferguson decision? “Separate but equal” facilities were constitutional Racial segregation was legal.
Civil Rights Identify the Plessy v. Ferguson decision? “Separate but equal” facilities were constitutional Racial segregation was legal.
Demands for Civil Rights I. Setting the Scene 1. Jackie Robinson / Brooklyn Dodgers (1947) 1. Jackie Robinson / Brooklyn Dodgers (1947) a. ‘47 Rookie of.
Dred Scott to the ADA Civil Rights in the USA May 29, 2008 Please be in your seats with your Ivan Nikonov reading out.
CIVIL RIGHTS. Civil Rights  Slavery, Missouri Compromise  Dred Scott(1856)  Civil War  Post Civil War Amendments  Reconstruction, 1877 Compromise,
Brown vs. Board of Education By Jackson Sullivan.
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.
Plessy v. Ferguson Big Papi Vinny. In 1892, Homer Plessy took a seat in the “whites only” car of a train and refused to move. He was arrested, and convicted.
THE MODERN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT Taking a walk With Civil Rights Leaders and established laws for African Americans and Women.
Civil Rights Cases (1883) Background Civil Rights Act in 1875 declared it a crime to deny equal access to public accommodations on account of race or color.

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.
Chapter 6 Civil Rights. Early Slavery Issues Congress banned slave trade in –20 year period specified by Constitution Battle of north vs. south.
Early Civil Rights Amendments and Court Cases. Reconstruction Era 13 th Amendment: Ended slavery 14 th Amendment: Extended citizenship to African-Americans,
{ From Whence do Civil Rights Arise? A few acts of Government.
Unit 3 Objectives 30d 30e 30f. 14 th Amendment No state shall make or enforce any law that shall abridge the privileges or immunities of the citizens.
Minority Movements: The Civil Rights Movement. Civil War: Results  13 th Amendment: 1865 – President Andrew Johnson  Abolished Slavery  14 th Amendment.
18.1 The Movement Begins. Lesson Objectives 1. The students will be able to explain the difference between de facto segregation and de jure segregation.
Chapter 5: Civil Rights American Democracy Now, 4/e Copyright © 2015 McGraw- Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without.
Chapter 4 Civil rights. The Civil Rights Struggle: After the Civil War, African Americans routinely faced discrimination, or unfair treatment based on.
Civil Rights. 14th Amendment "No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the U.S.; nor shall.
Civil Rights Movement. How did it begin? ● Segregation, especially in the South, still existed. ● People were frustrated with a lack of voting rights.
The 1950s Civil Rights Movement Vocabulary list. Civil Rights Definition: The rights that every person should have regardless of his or her sex, race,
21.1 Taking on Segregation. The Segregation system ■The Civil Rights Act of 1875 had outlawed segregation in public facilities ■In 1890 Louisiana passed.
Chapter 4 Civil rights.
Civil Rights in the 1940s–1950s.
Lyndon B. Johnson.
XIV. Roots of the American Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Ch. 4.4.
Chapter 5 Notes – The Bill of Rights Civil Liberties & Rights
Civil Rights and Women’s Rights
4.4 Struggle for Civil Rights
Civil Rights Civil rights is the Idea that government should protect from discrimination based upon race, gender, religion and sex The rights and privileges.
Civil Rights Created by Educational Technology Network
Civil Rights Chapter 18.
Civil Rights Movement.
Ch. 18 Sec. 1 Early CRM in 1940s & 1950s Essential Question: What events in the 1940s & 1950s led to the start of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement?
__Do Now__ What is segregation? What were the segregation laws called?
Civil Rights Movement:
Civil Rights Vocab Chapter 18 – Unit 4 – 19 words.
What did the Civil Rights Act of 1875 do?
Civil Rights Movement Civil rights: right to vote, right to equal treatment, right to speak out.
Segregation and Civil Right Movement
“We Shall Overcome” Objectives:
AP Government “Civil Rights Movement”
Thought-Provoker: How would you feel if you were an African-American who lived during Jim Crow & couldn’t use the same drinking fountains as whites?
Civil Rights Notes From icivics.com.
Civil Rights for African-Americans
Civil Rights Movement.
THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
Unit 3: Civil Liberties & Civil Rights
Ch. 21—Equality Under the Law
The Civil Rights Movement Begins
Segregation and Civil Rights
The Civil Rights Struggle
Ch. 20 the Civil Rights Movement
What are the affects of segregation?
Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court Case 1896
Civil Rights: Equality Under the Law Ch. 21
Brown v. Board of Education
“Separate but Equal” “Separate but Equal”.
The Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights “Equal Protection”.
Separate-but-Equal AP Government.
Presentation transcript:

Separate-but-Equal AP Government 2012

Motivation Is it possible for there to be separate, but equal educational institutions? What are the pro’s and con’s of it as a system? Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) established the separate-but-equal doctrine.

Plessy v. Ferguson Plessy was 7/8 white and 1/8 black refused to obey the Louisiana law requiring blacks and whites to occupy separate cars on trains operated by the state.

14th Amendment (1868) “No state shall… deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” This is known as the equal protection clause. Did Plessy v. Ferguson reaffirm this right?

Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka (1954) Student presentation De jure (legally permitted) segregation vs. de facto (circumstances produce it even though no law requires it) segregation Led to Civil Rights movements in the 1950’s and 1960’s Rosa Parks Montgomery Bus Boycott Martin Luther King, Jr.

The Civil Rights Act of 1964 Forbade specific forms of discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, and gender Outlawed discrimination in public places of accommodation, such as hotels, restaurants, theaters, and public transportation It cut off federal funds for any federal or state government project or facility that practiced any form of discrimination. It banned discrimination in employment. It outlawed arbitrary discrimination in employment. It outlawed arbitrary discrimination in voter registration. It authorized the federal government to sue to desegregate public schools and facilities.

Article on Civil Rights Act of 1964 Read the article, Supreme Court Scales Back Part of the ’64 Civil Rights Act. What changes does this ruling make regarding: Minimum SAT scores for UC/NCAA Title IX Private law suits Environmental justice movements

To enforce the Fourteenth Amendment more clearly, Congress passed the A. Civil Rights Act of 1964 B. Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act C. Social Security Act D. Twenty-sixth Amendment E. War Powers Resolution