370 likes | 613 Vues
1960s. Great Society and Civil Rights Movement. Great Society. Great Society. In the 1964 campaign, President Johnson declared war on poverty. The result: Great Society Programs Programs included: Medicare- government health insurance for seniors Head Start- a preschool program; helped
E N D
1960s Great Society and Civil Rights Movement
Great Society • In the 1964 campaign, President Johnson declared war on poverty. • The result: Great Society Programs • Programs included: • Medicare- government health insurance for seniors • Head Start- a preschool program; helped disadvantaged students be ready for Kindergarten • Voting Rights Act- banned literacy tests that denied African Americans the right to vote
13th Amendment • 1865: abolished slavery as a legal institution.
14th Amendment • Was designed to grant citizenship and protect civil liberties of recently freed slaves.
15th Amendment • 1870 – Protects rights of citizens to vote regardless of race, color, or previous condition of slavery.
Racism • Deeply rootedprejudice whichmay beexpressed inthe idea thatone race issuperior toanother. • Governor George Wallace attempting toblock integration at the University ofAlabama, 1963.
Jim Crow • Jim Crow was not aperson, yet affectedthe lives of millions ofpeople. "Jim Crow" came to personify the systemof government-sanctioned racialoppression andsegregation in theUnited States
Literacy Tests • Southern (and some western) stateshad a complicated voter registration process. • Purpose: deny the vote to those who were not white. • In the South, this process was often called the "literacy test." • (It was much more than a simple test). • http://www.ccle.fourh.umn.edu/literacy.pdf
Segregation • The separation of the races by law in all aspects of society- schools, housing,restaurants, club, buses and trains,theaters, and all kinds of public and privatefacilities.
Types of Segregation • De Facto Segregation: Segregation that exists by practice and customs • De Jure Segregation: Segregation by law
Separate but Equal • The legal principle, first set forth in the 1896 Supreme Court case Plessy v. Ferguson. • Separatefacilities and accommodations for Black people were constitutional so long as these resources were equal in quality to those provided for the white community.
Separate but Equal? • WhiteSchools • BlackSchools
Prejudice • A negative attitude oropinion about aperson or groupbased upon thatperson or group'srace, color, religion,national origin,ethnicity, accent,gender, disability, orother externalcharacteristic. • Do we still have prejudice today? Against whom?
Ku Klux Klan • The KuKlux Klan(KKK) wasoriginallyformed toterrorizeand scareBlacks
Lynching • murder by mob violence, without due process of law.
NAACP • Thurgood Marshall worked with NAACP to help overturn older court rulings on segregation. Most notably Brown vs. Board of Education • National Association for theAdvancement of Colored People(NAACP) is a civil rights organization. Itworks to end discrimination againstblacks and other minority groups.
Brown vs. Topeka, KS Board of Education • Landmark Supreme Court Case that effectively denied the legal basis for segregation in schools
“All Deliberate Speed” • Words used by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1955 in its ruling on how communities were to apply the Court’s Brown v.Topeka Board ofEducation decision of the previous year
Integration • Removing allbarriers andplacing all groupsof people together • Also known asdesegregation
EXECUTIVE ORDER • Rule or orderissued by anexecutivebranch of agovernment(ex. thepresident of theUnited States)and carryingthe force of law
Little Rock 9 • Nine African American Students who were suppose to be allowed to attend an all white school in Little Rock. • They faced huge racism and had to be escorted by the National Guard when parents, students, teachers and mayor refused to allow them to attend.
EMMITT TILL • 14 yr. oldEmmett Till wasmurdered forsaying “Byebaby” to a whitewoman inMississippi
Civil Rights Leaders • Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. • First famous for Montgomery Bus Boycott that lasted 381 days • Admired Gandhi • Won Nobel Peace Prize • “March on Washington”
Martin Luther King’s Ideology • Expose the racism, prejudice, discrimination and brutality that existed in the Southern United States. • Use non-violent means to highlight the violence, and ensure support. • Use civil disobedience to promote the change he wanted.
Civil Disobedience • the practice ofavoidingviolence as ameans toresolveconflict or endinjustice
Boycotts • Boycott is a refusal todeal with an individual,organization, orbusiness. • 1955- Montgomery Bus Boycott
Sit-ins • An act ofoccupyingseats in araciallysegregatedestablishmentin organizedprotestagainstdiscrimination
FREE RIDERS / SCLC / SNCL • Southern Christian Leadership Council (non-violent crusades) • Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee • Often leads to boycotts and sit-ins
Malcolm X • Formerly Malcolm Little • Changed his name in Prison • Memorized the English Dictionary • Learned Islam and became Muslim • Voice of the Muslim Brotherhood
Malcolm’s Ideology • Believed African Americans should stand up and fight for their freedom. – Black Nationalism • Believed violence was necessary to earn freedom. • Believed that the Christian religion was based on the white culture.
Stokely Carmichael • The Black Power Movement • SNCC became more radical under the leadership of Stokely Carmichael. • Carmichael advocated ideas of black power, which called upon African Americans to embrace their heritage, build communities, and lead their own organizations. • The Black Panthers • New militant political party called the Black Panthers was formed. • The Black Panthers wanted African Americans to lead their own communities. • Demanded that the federal government rebuild the nation’s ghettos.
Consequences Martin Luther King • One of the most widely revered figures in American History. • Achieved legislation (Voting Rights Act and Civil Rights Act) • He was shot outside a hotel in Memphis, Tennessee in 1968. Malcolm X • Tensions arose between Malcolm and the Nation of Islam. • Malcolm said he would defend himself against death threats. • He was shot 16 times during a speech in 1965.
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT • 1964 Civil Rights Act:banningsegregation inpublic facilities aswell as racialdiscrimination inemployment andeducation.
The Voting's Rights Act of 1965 • The murder of voting-rights activists inMississippi gainednational attention, • President Johnsonissued a call for astrong voting rights law • Hearings began afterwards on the bill that would become the Voting Rights Act. • Voting Rights Act: Ends discriminatory voting practices.
Affirmative Action • Set of public policies to help eliminate discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin. • The phrase was first used by JKF in his Executive Order 10925. • originally meant to end discrimination for job applicants and employees. • Some feel it is reverse discrimination: giving special rights to some while others are left out. • According to NOW, it levels the playing field for women and minorities in jobs and education.