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21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT

21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

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Page 1: 21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT

Page 2: 21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION• De facto: by practice/by choice

• People tend to live near others similar to themselves

• Esp. common in the North and today• De jure: by law

• Jim Crow laws in the South kept blacks out of white communities

• Civil Rights laws attacked de jure well, but de facto is much harder to change

Page 3: 21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION• “Race riots” in Harlem, NYC and Watts, Los

Angeles

• Showed Americans that blacks outside the South were angry about housing, jobs, and education

Page 4: 21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

MALCOLM X• Converted to Islam by following the teachings of the

Nation of Islam

• An aggressive black Muslim group• Encouraged blacks to fight violence with violence

• Once he went on his Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca, he began to preach peace

• He was killed by a member of the Nation of Islam who disagreed with his peaceful approach in 1965

Page 5: 21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

BLACK POWER• Stokely Carmichael encouraged African-

Americans to be proud of their race and culture

• He called for self-defense and “Black Power”• He appealed to young blacks who felt that

change was not happening fast enough

Page 6: 21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

BLACK POWER• The Black Panthers also called for violence

against white police officers

• Wanted African Americans to create their own, self-sufficient society in the U.S.

• They even ran day-care centers, homeless shelters, soup kitchens, etc.

Page 7: 21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

BLACK POWER• The FBI was very concerned about these “Black

Power” groups

• FBI chief J Edgar Hoover had their phones wiretapped

• He had been doing the same for Dr. King for years

• These phone taps and other tactics were often conducted without a warrant

Page 8: 21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

1968 AND BEYOND• Dr. King was assassinated April 3, 1968 at a

hotel in Memphis, TN by a white supremacist

• Some evidence points to FBI involvement…• His death sparked race riots in over 100 cities,

including Cleveland

Page 9: 21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

1968 AND BEYOND• 1968 Civil Rights Act bans segregation in

housing

• Banks and real estate agents can’t discriminate with their customers

• But due to poverty and unequal schools, many blacks could afford to move into nicer suburbs

Page 10: 21.3 CHANGES IN THE MOVEMENT. 2 TYPES OF SEGREGATION De facto: by practice/by choice People tend to live near others similar to themselves Esp. common

1968 AND BEYOND• In the 1970s, affirmative action policies took hold

• This gave special consideration to job/college applicants from groups who have long been persecuted

• Increased the number of minorities in higher education and higher paying jobs

• Some whites felt that the special treatment was unfair