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Section 1: Civil Rights and Discrimination

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Section 1: Civil Rights and Discrimination Section 2: Equal Justice under Law Section 3: Civil Rights Laws Section 4: Citizenship and Immigration Debating the Issue ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Section 1: Civil Rights and Discrimination


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Chapter 11 Civil Rights
  • Section 1 Civil Rights and Discrimination
  • Section 2 Equal Justice under Law
  • Section 3 Civil Rights Laws
  • Section 4 Citizenship and Immigration

3
Section 1 at a Glance
  • Civil Rights and Discrimination
  • Civil rights are the freedoms and protections
    that individuals have by law, especially those
    that concern equal status and treatment.
  • The meaning of civil rights in the United States
    has changed over time as society, laws, and legal
    interpretations of civil rights have changed.
  • For much of U.S. history, certain ethnic and
    racial groups, women, and others have suffered
    from discrimination and a denial of civil rights.

4
Civil Rights and Discrimination
Main Idea The Constitution is designed to
guarantee basic civil rights to everyone. The
meaning of civil rights has changed over time,
and many groups have been denied their civil
rights at different times in U.S. history.
  • Reading Focus
  • What are civil rights, and how have civil rights
    in the United States changed over time?
  • How has a pattern of discrimination affected the
    civil rights of some groups in U.S. history?

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The Importance of Civil Rights
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Civil Rights in the United States
  • What Are Civil Rights?
  • Equal status and treatment
  • Example Illegal to discriminate based on race
  • Equal participation in government
  • Example Right to vote
  • How Have Civil Rights Changed?
  • At the time of the Declaration of Independence,
    American society viewed women and racial
    minorities as unequal to white men of European
    ancestry.
  • American societys views now include equality for
    those groups previously denied equal treatment.

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Contrasting How is the meaning of civil rights
today different from in the past?
Answer(s) Groups that were formerly denied their
civil rights by the government, including women
and minorities, are now recognized as being
entitled to them.
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A Pattern of Discrimination
In its history, the United States has practiced
legalized discrimination toward minority groups
based on prejudice, unfounded negative opinions,
and racism, unfair treatment because of race.
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A Pattern of Discrimination (contd.)
  • Asian Americans
  • Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 effectively ended
    Chinese immigration
  • Japanese American Internment during World War II
  • Hispanics
  • 1840s U.S. took over the southwest leading to
    discrimination, violence, and loss of land
  • Immigrated from Puerto Rico, Cuba, Mexico for
    work and to escape political turmoil
  • Women
  • Few rights before 1920
  • 1873, Bradwell v. Illinois Women barred from
    practicing law

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Summarizing What groups have experienced civil
rights violations in the past?
Answer(s) racial minorities, women, religious
minorities, immigrants
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Section 2 at a Glance
  • Equal Justice under Law
  • The Fourteenth Amendment guarantees equal
    protection of the law.
  • Despite attempts to protect their civil rights
    after the Civil War, African Americans suffered
    discrimination, unequal treatment, and legalized
    segregation.
  • Womens struggle for equal justice initially
    centered on the right to vote.

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Equal Justice under Law
Main Idea The Fourteenth Amendment was designed
to bolster civil rights by requiring states to
guarantee to freed slaves the equal protection
of the laws. However, African Americans and
women still struggled to win equal treatment in
American society.
  • Reading Focus
  • What is meant by equal protection of the law?
  • What civil rights laws were passed after the
    Civil War, and why did they fail to end
    segregation?
  • How did women fight for and win voting rights?
  • What events began to roll back racial and ethnic
    segregation in the United States?

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Equal Protection
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Equal Protection of the Law
  • The Equal Protection Clause
  • 14th Amendments equal protection clause No
    State shall . . . deny to any person within its
    jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
  • Specifically targeted at states protects civil
    rights

Reasonable Distinction There are times when it is
appropriate and legal to distinguish between
different groups of people.
  • Three tests the courts use to determine fairness
  • Rational Basis Tests (good reason drivers
    license)
  • Intermediate Scrutiny Test (higher standard
    Selective Service)
  • Strict Scrutiny Test (highest standard)
  • Restriction of a fundamental right
  • Classification made based on race or national
    origin (suspect classification)

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Identifying the Main Idea How does the Court
interpret the equal protection clause?
Answer(s) by using reasonable distinction to
determine whether it is legal to distinguish
between different groups of people
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Laws and Segregation after the Civil War
  • PostCivil War Laws
  • 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments
  • Many federal civil rights laws
  • Little effect on society
  • Racial Segregation
  • Progress in the South, 18651877
  • Compromise of 1877 led to
  • Violence
  • Segregation separation of racial groups
  • Jim Crow laws
  • Aimed at African Americans
  • Raised positions of whites while lowering
    nonwhites
  • Examples schools, theaters
  • Separate-but-equal doctrine
  • 1896, Plessy v. Ferguson Louisiana law requiring
    separate railway cars for whites
  • Allowed separate facilities so long as they were
    equal

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Sequencing What events after the Civil War led
to legalized segregation in the South?
Answer(s) the end of military occupation in the
South, the rise of extremist groups such as the
Ku Klux Klan, and the passage of Jim Crow laws by
state governments
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Voting Rights for Women
Womens demand for equal rights grew out their
participation in the struggle for African
Americans rights. The main goal was womens
suffrage (right to vote).
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Sequencing What were some key events in the
fight for womens suffrage?
Answer(s) the Seneca Falls Convention
Declaration of Sentiments lobbying to have women
included in the Fifteenth Amendment the Wyoming
Territory allowing women the right to vote in
1869 Nineteenth Amendment ratified
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Rolling Back Segregation
  • Early Legal Challenges
  • NAACP fought to end de jure segregation (legal
    segregation)
  • Example Gaines v. Canada (1938), Sweatt v.
    Painter (1950)
  • Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas
    (1954)
  • Filed on behalf of all African American students
    overturned Plessy
  • School Desegregation
  • Schools begin phasing out separation of groups
    based on race
  • De facto segregation (segregation in fact
    reflect social and economic differences between
    groups)

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Summarizing How did legalized segregation in
the United States finally end?
Answer(s) It was challenged in the courts, using
cases in which students were denied an equal
education.
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Landmark Supreme Court CasesBrown v. Board of
Education of Topeka, Kansas (1954)
Why It Matters In this case the Supreme Court
ruled that de jure segregation violated the equal
protection clause of the Constitution. This
decision led to desegregation and helped spark
the civil rights movement.
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Section 3 at a Glance
  • Civil Rights Laws
  • The civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s
    led to a series of federal laws designed to
    protect peoples civil rights.
  • In addition to civil rights laws, affirmative
    action policies attempted to address the effects
    of past discrimination.

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Civil Rights Laws
Main Idea In the 1950s and 1960s, an organized
movement demanding civil rights changed American
society and led to a series of new federal laws
that protected the civil rights of African
Americans and other groups.
  • Reading Focus
  • What was the civil rights movement, and what
    effects did it have on American society?
  • What new federal laws were passed in response to
    the civil rights movement?
  • How were civil rights extended to women,
    minorities, and people with disabilities?
  • How are affirmative action policies a part of the
    civil rights movement?

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Standing Up for Your Rights
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The Civil Rights Movement
  • Civil rights movement mass movement during 1950s
    and 1960s to guarantee civil rights of African
    Americans
  • protests against injustice, segregation
  • support for new federal civil rights laws
  • Key Events
  • 9 African American students enter Central High
    School, Little Rock, AR
  • Rosa Parks refuses to give up seat on bus,
    resulting in bus boycott led by Martin Luther
    King Jr., and successful suit against city of
    Montgomery, AL by NAACP
  • Nonviolent protests were strategies used by
    activists
  • Acts of civil disobedience (nonviolent refusal to
    obey law) common.
  • 1963 March on Washington
  • 1965 March from Selma to Montgomery violent
    images led to passage of new federal civil rights
    laws

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Sequencing What were the key events of the early
civil rights movement?
Answer(s) Rosa Parks refusing to give up her
bus seat Montgomery bus boycott Supreme Courts
upholding that public facilities could not be
segregated acts of civil disobedience 1963
March on Washington with Martin Luther Kings I
Have a Dream speech Selma to Montgomery marches
leading to Bloody Sunday
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New Federal Laws
  • Civil Rights Laws under Eisenhower
  • Civil Rights Act of 1957 (Civil Rights
    Commission)
  • Civil Rights Act of 1960 (voting)
  • Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • Banned discrimination based on race, color,
    religion, sex, or national origin in voting,
    employment, public accommodations
  • Age added in 1967
  • Under the commerce clause
  • Voting Rights Laws
  • Twenty-fourth Amendment (banned poll tax tax on
    someone attempting to vote)
  • Voting Rights Act of 1965 (banned literacy tests)
  • Effects of New Federal Laws
  • Desegregation
  • Housing
  • Jobs
  • Voting
  • Public accommodations

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Summarizing What major federal civil rights laws
were passed in the 1950s and 1960s?
Answer(s) Civil Rights Act of 1957 Civil Rights
Act of 1960 Twenty-fourth Amendment Civil
Rights Act of 1964 Voting Rights Act Civil
Rights Act of 1968
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Extending Civil Rights
  • Women
  • 1963 Equal Pay Act
  • 1972 Title IX of the Education Amendments
  • 1975 Equal Credit Opportunity Act
  • Hispanics
  • 1946, Mendez v. Westminster
  • 1954, Hernandez v. Texas
  • 1973, Keyes v. Denver Unified School District
  • Native Americans
  • Protested to expand civil rights (Example AIM)
  • Indian Self-Determination and Education
    Assistance Act of 1975
  • 1978 American Indian Religious Freedom Act
  • People with Disabilities
  • 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act

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Summarizing How were civil rights extended to
groups besides African Americans?
Answer(s) 1946, segregation of Hispanic students
was illegal 1954, equal protection clause
applied to all groups, not just African
Americans 1973, de facto segregation of
Hispanics in public schools unconstitutional
1975 Voting Rights Act Indian Self-Determination
and Education Assistance Act of 1975 1978
American Indian Religious Freedom Act 1990
Americans with Disabilities Act
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Affirmative Action
  • Years of past discrimination resulted in women
    and minorities being underrepresented in certain
    businesses and education. Affirmative action aims
    to provide opportunities for them.
  • Early Affirmative Action Efforts
  • Began in 1960s
  • Late 1970s affirmative action controversial
  • Some people claimed they were victims of reverse
    discrimination, discrimination against the
    majority group
  • The Bakke Case
  • Allan Bakke denied entry to medical school with
    quota (fixed number or percentage) of minorities
    needed
  • Regents of the University of California v. Bakke
    (1978), Supreme Court ruled universitys quota
    system invalid

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Affirmative Action (contd.)
  • The Michigan Cases
  • Two cases questioning affirmative action at
    University of Michigan
  • Court ruled in favor of applicant in Gratz v.
    Bollinger (2003)
  • Court ruled against applicant in Grutter v.
    Bollinger (2003)
  • Ballot Measures
  • Several states passed laws (voter initiatives)
    limiting affirmative action
  • California, 1996 Washington, 1998 Michigan, 2006

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Summarizing How have affirmative action policies
changed over time?
Answer(s) Some courts have ruled against
affirmative action and some states, such as
California, have restricted affirmative action
policies.
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Debating the Issue Affirmative Action
Should the government promote affirmative action
to help address the effects of past
discrimination? Since 1965 federal law has
required many public institutions and private
companies to institute affirmative action
policies to provide more opportunities for
members of historically underrepresented groups,
such as racial minorities and women. Affirmative
action policies vary widely, employing methods
such as recruitment, quotas, and proportional
representation. However, these policies have been
controversial, drawing both praise and criticism.
Although the Supreme Court has ruled on a number
of affirmative action cases, it has overturned
about as many policies as it has upheld.
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Debating the Issue
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Section 4 at a Glance
  • Citizenship and Immigration
  • Citizenship comes with both rights and
    responsibilities.
  • Throughout U.S. history, immigrants have come to
    the United States hoping to attain U.S.
    citizenship.
  • The federal government regulates immigration to
    the United States.

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Citizenship and Immigration
Main Idea Being a U.S. citizen includes certain
rights and responsibilities. The federal
government regulates citizenship through its
immigration and naturalization policies.
  • Reading Focus
  • In what ways do people receive U.S. citizenship,
    and what civic responsibilities do citizens have?
  • What immigration policies has the federal
    government adopted in its history?
  • How has the federal government responded to the
    challenge of illegal immigration?

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U.S. Citizenship
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U.S. Citizenship
  • People become U.S. citizens in several ways
  • Citizenship by Birth
  • jus soli (law of the soil)
  • jus sanguinis (law of the blood)
  • Citizenship by Naturalization
  • legal process by which an immigrant becomes a
    citizen

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Identifying Supporting Details What are the two
main ways of achieving citizenship in the United
States?
Answer(s) by birth and by naturalization
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Immigration Policies
  • Encouraging Immigration
  • At first plenty of land and resources
  • Over time, less land different languages and
    cultures
  • Restricting Immigration
  • Laws restricting numbers of immigrants,
    especially from Asia, Africa, Latin America
  • Nationality Act of 1965, did away with
    country-based quota system, allowed 290,000
    immigrants per year, gave preference to skilled
    workers, relatives of U.S. citizens
  • Law updated in 1990, allows about 675,000
    immigrants annually
  • Political Asylum and Refugees
  • Separate immigration policies for refugees
  • United States accepts more refugees than any
    other country

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Sequencing How has immigration policy in the
United States changed over time?
Answer(s) first hundred years little
regulation 1875 barred entry to criminals
1882 Chinese Exclusion Act Quota Law of 1921
and National Origins Quota Act of 1924
restricted immigration by country, established
annual number of immigrants Nationality Act
Amendments of 1965 did away with country-based
quota system
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Illegal Immigration
  • The Situation Today
  • Undocumented alien Someone who lives in a
    country without authorization from the government
  • Deportation Legal process of forcing a
    noncitizen to leave a country
  • Difficult to determine exact number in United
    States
  • Most from Mexico and Latin America
  • The Debate over Illegal Immigration
  • Pro Hard workers who contribute to U.S. economy
  • Con Drain on government services
  • Illegal Immigration Policies
  • Immigration Reform and Control Act, 1986
  • Effect of September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks

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Summarizing What policies has the federal
government created to deal with illegal
immigration?
Answer(s) created Border Patrol Immigration
Reform and Control Act Reform and Immigrant
Responsibility Act
61
We the People The Citizen and the Constitution
  • Civic Participation
  • Our system of government depends on the active
    participation of citizens. Citizens, after all,
    have the ultimate power and responsibility to
    govern. This lesson outlines the importance of
    civic participation in our constitutional
    democracy.
  • Why should Americans participate in the civic
    life of the country?
  • How is civic participation connected to
    self-interest?
  • How is civic participation related to
    advancing the common good?
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