Brown v. Board of Education was the landmark Supreme Court case that ended racial segregation in schools in 1954. But it wasn’t the first to take on the issue. Eight years earlier, in 1946, a group of Mexican American families in California won the very first federal court case ruling ...
aThe era of blatant discrimination ended in the 1960s through the courageous actions of thousand of blacks participating in peaceful marches and sit-ins, to force Southern states to implement the Federal desegregation laws in schools and public accommodation 大胆歧视时代在60年代在学校和公共设施结束了...
1. The Supreme Court unanimously ruled that racial segregation in schools was unconstitutional. 2. The system of racial segregation that used to exist in South Africa was called apartheid. 3. Legal racial segregation has been outlawed; blacks have the vote; votes are pretty much equal in value...
During this period, many black men participated in southern states' constitutional conventions, voted, and held political offices. But by the 1870s, national support for Reconstruction was decreasing, and when Reconstruction formally ended in 1877, southern states passed more discriminatory laws calledJi...
英文: Opponents discovered that he had opposed desegregation of schools and public housing in Arizona. 中文: 反对者们发现他曾经在亚利桑那州反对在学校和公众场合废除种族歧视。更详细... 英文: The era of blatant discrimination ended in the 1960s through the courageous actions of thousands of blacks ...
9 RegisterLog in Sign up with one click: Facebook Twitter Google Share on Facebook (redirected fromRacial desegregation) Thesaurus Medical Encyclopedia Related to Racial desegregation:School desegregation de·seg·re·gate (dē-sĕg′rĭ-gāt′) ...
This word was inherited from PIE swedh- "one's own" which, with a different suffix, ended up in English as self and Russian as svoi "one's own". Grex, grege comes from PIE ger-/gor- "to gather", and shows up in many Latin words which English borrowed: gregarious, congregate, ...
Board of Education case ended racial segregation in schools across the country, a Mexican family in California paved the way for equality in schools. At the center of the 1946 case was Sylvia Mendez, an 8-year-old girl in Westminster, California, who dreamed of going to the “beautiful ...
Power is not unidirectional; ‘the social’ is an arena of indeterminacy; multiple discourses intersect, reinforce, contradict, and overturn one another; rather than consensus, ‘agonism’ and struggle are the stuff of politics; and subjectivity is open-ended ‘becoming’. The implications of post...