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What were Jim Crow laws?
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All Flashcards in Topic 11.11
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11.11.112 cards
What were Jim Crow laws?
Southern US laws enforcing racial segregation in schools, transport, restaurants and public life after Reconstruction, upheld by *Plessy v. Ferguson* (1896).
Why did WWII and the Cold War push civil rights forward politically?
Black soldiers fought for freedom abroad then faced segregation at home; the USSR used US racism as Cold War propaganda, embarrassing US leaders internationally.
What was the Great Migration and why did it matter for civil rights?
The movement of millions of Black Southerners to Northern cities (1910s–1970) seeking jobs and escaping Jim Crow, which built large organized Black communities able to support a mass movement.
How did economic factors drive the movement's emergence?
Job discrimination, sharecropping poverty and exclusion from the postwar economic boom gave African Americans direct material reasons to demand change.
Name three ideas that shaped the movement's philosophy.
Black church teaching, American founding ideals of equality, and Gandhian non-violent resistance from India's independence movement.
What method did Martin Luther King Jr. use, and in what key campaigns?
Non-violent direct action through the SCLC — the Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955–56), Birmingham campaign (1963), and March on Washington (1963).
How did Malcolm X's approach differ from MLK's?
Malcolm X argued for Black self-defense and self-reliance 'by any means necessary' rather than non-violent acceptance of arrest and suffering.
What was 'Black Power' and who popularized it?
A movement emphasizing Black pride and community control, popularized by Stokely Carmichael after 1966; embodied by the Black Panther Party.
What did the Black Panther Party actually do?
Combined armed self-defense against police brutality with community programs like free breakfasts for children and health clinics, founded in 1966.
What did Ella Baker contribute to the movement?
Helped found the SCLC and SNCC (1960), believing ordinary grassroots people, not just famous leaders, should drive the movement's decisions.
Who was Fannie Lou Hamer?
A Mississippi sharecropper beaten for registering to vote, who became a powerful voting-rights activist and co-founded the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (1964).
Name the four major grassroots civil rights organizations and their main method.
NAACP (court cases), SCLC (non-violent campaigns), SNCC (sit-ins, Freedom Summer), CORE (Freedom Rides testing bus desegregation).
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Brown v. Board of Education (1954)
Supreme Court ruled segregated public schools unconstitutional, overturning **Plessy v. Ferguson**'s 'separate but equal' — a legal breakthrough, but one the Court could not enforce on its own.
Why was Brown v. Board a 'change on paper' rather than a 'change on the ground' at first?
The ruling had no built-in enforcement; many Southern school districts ignored, delayed, or violently resisted it (e.g. Little Rock 1957) for years afterward.
Civil Rights Act (1964) — main provisions
Banned discrimination in employment and public places (restaurants, hotels, theatres) based on race, colour, religion, sex, or national origin; created the EEOC to enforce workplace rules.
Why did President Johnson succeed where Kennedy struggled on civil rights legislation?
Johnson used his Senate experience, the emotional momentum after Kennedy's assassination, and pressure from the Birmingham and March on Washington images to push the bill through Congress in 1964.
Voting Rights Act (1965) — what changed
Banned literacy tests and sent federal registrars to Southern counties, directly enforcing the 15th Amendment; Black voter registration in the South rose sharply within a few years.
Social and cultural change vs. economic change after the civil rights movement
Social/cultural: desegregated public spaces, greater Black political representation, cultural pride (Black is Beautiful). Economic: much smaller — Black family income and wealth gaps versus white Americans barely narrowed.
Why do historians debate 'how much' changed by the 1970s?
Legal segregation ended, but de facto segregation (housing, school funding, policing, wealth) persisted — some argue the movement won rights but not economic equality.
Chicano Movement — political factor behind its emergence
Mexican Americans were underrepresented in government and faced unequal treatment by police and courts, despite having fought in WWII and Korea.
Chicano Movement — economic factor behind its emergence
Farm workers, many Mexican American, endured low pay, no job security, and dangerous conditions — grievances that fed the Delano Grape Strike (1965).
Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta
Co-founded the National Farm Workers Association (later United Farm Workers) and led the Delano Grape Strike and boycott, using nonviolent tactics inspired partly by the Black civil rights movement.
Chicanismo
The idea/ideology of pride in Mexican American identity and culture, rejecting assimilation and demanding equal rights — the 'role of ideas' behind the Chicano Movement.
Social factor behind the Chicano Movement
School segregation and curricula that ignored Mexican American history and culture, plus discrimination in housing and everyday life, pushed a new generation (especially students) to organize.
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What is the Chicano Movement?
The Mexican American civil rights movement of the 1960s-70s, fighting for labour rights, land rights, political power, and cultural identity.
What was the Delano grape strike and boycott?
A 1965-70 campaign by farmworkers (led by Chavez and Huerta) striking and asking consumers to boycott table grapes, ending in the first farmworker union contracts.
Who was Cesar Chavez?
Co-founder of the UFW; used non-violent methods (strikes, boycotts, fasting) to fight for farmworker rights.
Who was Dolores Huerta?
UFW co-founder and chief negotiator; coined the phrase "Si, se puede" ("Yes, we can").
Who was Reies Lopez Tijerina?
Led the New Mexico land-grant movement, using confrontational tactics like occupying a national forest and raiding a courthouse.
What were the 1968 "Blowouts"?
School walkouts by over 15,000 East LA students protesting unequal schools and demanding Chicano history in the curriculum.
What was MEChA?
Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan — a student organization founded in 1969 spreading Chicano activism on college campuses.
What was La Raza Unida Party?
A Chicano political party founded in 1970 that won local elected office in Texas and Colorado — an example of political change.
Compare non-violent and confrontational Chicano methods.
Non-violent (boycotts, fasting) won broad public sympathy and contracts; confrontational methods (land occupations, Brown Berets) grabbed attention but drew crackdowns and criticism.
What legal change resulted from the movement?
The 1970 Delano contracts gave farmworkers their first union recognition, higher pay, and pesticide safety rules.
Why is the movement's economic change described as limited?
UFW bargaining power declined through the 1980s as growers found ways around contracts, and farmworkers remained among the lowest-paid US workers.
What role did women's groups like Comision Femenil Mexicana play?
They pushed the movement to confront sexism within its own ranks, not just from growers — foreshadowing a separate Chicana feminist movement.
Topic 11.11 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Social movements in the Americas (1945–2020)
History (2028+) exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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