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Chapter 6 Civil Rights
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Early Slavery Issues Congress banned slave trade in 1808. –20 year period specified by Constitution Battle of north vs. south Missouri Compromise of 1820 –Missouri admitted as a slave state, Maine admitted as a free state
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Impact of the Civil War Civil War Amendments –13 th, 14 th, and 15 th Amendments –Southern states were required to ratify these amendments for re-admittance to Union –States enforced Black Codes –14 th amendment adds word “male” to constitution Follow up to Civil Rights Act of 1866: formally gave African Americans citizenship
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Civil Rights, Congress, and Supreme Court Congress supported African-Americans, Supreme Court did not. Judicial decisions also upheld Jim Crow Laws Civil Rights Cases –Supreme Court ruled that Congress could not prohibit individual (private) acts of discrimination
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Southern States Resist 15 th Amendment Methods to keep African-Americans from voting included –Literacy tests –Poll taxes –Property-owning qualifications –Grandfather clause
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Campaign in the Courts 14th amendment –broad interpretation: no differential treatment is acceptable –narrow interpretation: equal legal rights, but African Americans and whites could otherwise be treated differently. Supreme Court adopted narrow view in Plessy v Ferguson (1896).
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Plessy v. Ferguson Based around Louisiana state law mandating racial segregation for train cars Challenged by Homer Plessy, who was 7/8 white Supreme Court upheld Louisiana state law on the basis that “separate but equal” did not violate 14 th amendment Eventually overturned by Brown v. Board
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Push for Equality NAACP –National Association of Advancement for Colored People –W.E.B. DuBois NAWSA –National American Women’s Suffrage Association –Keyed 19 th Amendment
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NAACP Litigation Against “Plessy” NAACP campaign relied on courts. Targeted postgraduate law schools and won Thurgood Marshall: head of NAACP LDF –Became 1 st African-American S.C. justice Separation is inherently unequal- Brown v. Board of Education (1954)
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School Desegregation After Brown Supreme Court decisions can be difficult to implement –Ten years after Brown, only 1% of Southern schools were desegregated Arkansas’ governor refused to desegregate President Eisenhower sends down national guard
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African-American Rights Movement Rosa Parks successfully challenged segregated bus system MLK Jr’s march on D.C. JFK urged Congress to pass a law banning discrimination. –Continued by Lyndon B. Johnson after JFK’s assassination
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Civil Rights Act of 1964 Outlawed segregation in –voter registration –public accommodations engaged in interstate commerce Heart of Atlanta Motel v. U.S. –Employment on grounds of race, color, religion, national origin, or sex
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Impact of Civil Rights Act Education –Authorized Dept. of Justice to bring actions against insubordinate school districts that failed to comply with Brown v. Board of Ed. –De jure discrimination must be eliminated Employment –Prevented discrimination based on race, sex, age, religion, and origin –Included pregnancy in 1978
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Women’s Rights Equal Employment Opportunity Commission failed to enforce CRA as it applied to sex discrimination Female activists formed National Organization for Women (NOW) Equal Rights Amendment –Momentum halted by Roe ruling –Need for amendment became less urgent
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Equal Pay Act and Title IX 1963 Equal Pay Act required employers to pay men and women equally. –Mixed results Title IX bars educational institutions receiving federal funds from discriminating against females –Sports, education, classes, etc..
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Hispanic Americans Earliest push occurred in 1960’s 1965 Cesar Chavez organized workers into United Farm Workers Union –Led strike against grape growers Relied heavily on litigation –Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF)
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Disabled Americans 1990, veterans and other disabled people convinced Congress to pass the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) –Physical or mental impairment that limits one or more “life activities” –Extended Civil Rights Act to all those with physical or mental disability
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Affirmative Action Policies designed to give special attention or compensatory treatment to members of a previously disadvantaged group Regents of the University of California v. Bakke (1978)
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