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    • Civil rights movement

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      • Through nonviolent protest, the civil rights movement of the 1950s and ’60s broke the pattern of public facilities’ being segregated by “race” in the South and achieved the most important breakthrough in equal-rights legislation for African Americans since the Reconstruction period (1865–77).
      www.britannica.com/topic/racial-segregation
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  2. Oct 21, 2024 · Racial segregation provides a means of maintaining the economic advantages and superior social status of the politically dominant group, and in recent times it has been employed primarily by white populations to maintain their ascendancy over other groups by means of legal and social colour bars.

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  3. Nov 28, 2018 · Through so-called Jim Crow laws (named after a derogatory term for Blacks), legislators segregated everything from schools to residential areas to public parks to theaters to pools to cemeteries,...

  4. Oct 13, 2023 · In response to the discrimination and prejudice they faced, grassroots movements advocating for racial equality began to emerge during the 1950s and 1960s. These organisations played a pivotal role in raising awareness about racial discrimination and pushing for change.

  5. Racial segregation became the law in most parts of the American South until the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. These laws, known as Jim Crow laws , forced segregation of facilities and services, prohibited intermarriage, and denied suffrage.

  6. Key points. During the 1950s and 1960s, the civil rights movement made significant progress. The work of people like Claudette Colvin, Rosa Parks, Dr Martin Luther King Jr and Malcolm X led to the...

  7. Jun 2, 2020 · Racial segregation leads to growing achievement gaps – but it does so entirely through differences in school poverty, according to new research from education Professor Sean Reardon, who is ...

  8. In Roberts v. City of Boston, an 1850 decision, the state helped normalize segregated schools. In that case—filed by the Harvard-educated lawyer and US senator Charles Sumner on behalf of a five-year-old Black girl—the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court held that racial segregation in the city’s schools did not offend the law.

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