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Civil Rights 101
Table of Contents
grey arrow Introduction
Part One:
grey arrow Civil Rights: A Chronology
grey arrow Demographics
Part Two:
grey arrow Law and Policy
grey arrow Supreme Court and Civil Rights
grey arrow School Desegregation
grey arrow Housing
grey arrow Employment Discrimination
grey arrow Affirmative Action
grey arrow Voting
grey arrow Criminal Justice
Part Three:
grey arrow Civil Rights Expanded
grey arrow Women
grey arrow People with Disabilities
grey arrow Gays and Lesbians
grey arrow Native Americans
grey arrow Age
grey arrow Religion
grey arrow Civil liberties
grey arrow Labor movement
grey arrow Asians
grey arrow Latinos
Part Four:
grey arrow Race, Class and Economic Justice

CIVIL RIGHTS, at least for many Americans in the 20th century, is often considered synonymous with the African American and Latino freedom struggles - the protests and demonstrations led by Martin Luther King, Jr. in the South and the marches of striking farmworkers led by Cesar Chavez in the West. Both were - and continue as - nonviolent movements by people of color, victims of discrimination because of their race and national origin as they sought equal opportunity under the law.

BUT AFRICAN AMERICANS AND LATINOS have not been alone in their quest for equality. Others who faced discrimination for a variety of reasons -- such as gender, sexual orientation, disability, age, religion -- have also waged campaigns to end bias and to receive equal treatment on the American political and economic landscape.

THE 1954 SCHOOL DESEGREGATION DECISION and 1956 Montgomery bus boycott, while focusing public attention on discrimination against African Americans, also rekindled a drive for equality that spread well beyond the African American community. The civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s inspired Latinos, Native Americans, Asian Americans, women, and, more recently, people with disabilities and gay and lesbian people. The African American civil rights struggle provided not only the vision of equal opportunity, but also many of the tools and techniques for the movements that followed, including the use of the law, lobbying, and nonviolent direct action.

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