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Published byChristine Patrick Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 21 Civil Rights: Equal Justice Under Law
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Black Codes laws passed by Southern law- makers after the Civil War denied African-Americans of many of their rights: -voting -jury duty regulated their work habits
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Another purpose for the black codes was to separate blacks from whites in society. Segregate
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Congressional reaction to Black Codes: Civil Rights Act of 1866 guaranteed blacks the citizenship and civil rights enjoyed by other Americans protected blacks from state laws that were discriminatory
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Amendment 14 state and local governments must respect certain civil rights state and local governments are required to protect these rights as well
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Jim Crow Laws acts passed by legislatures in the South designed to segregate and legalize discrimination [although segregation was not usually written into state law in the North, the practice was common in housing, public places, and schools]
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Plessy v. Ferguson case heard by the Supreme Court in 1896 segregation legal as long as “equal” facilities were provided for both blacks and whites
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Civil Rights Movement Blacks began to organize and work for rights in the early-1900s: achieved some reforms in: -voting rights -housing -employment -armed forces
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Civil Rights groups NAACP, or the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People SCLC, or Southern Christian Leadership Conference CORE, or Congress for Racial Equality
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Strategies used: non-violent sit-ins marches boycotts lawsuits violence
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