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Brown Vs Board Of Education Essay

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Desegregation has been a pressing matter throughout the United States since the early 1600’s. Since the day that the first African slaves were brought to America, people of color have been fighting to gain equality, even to the death. They have made significant progress, one of the most important being the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation ending slavery. Another significant advancement for racial equality was the ruling of the trial of Brown vs. Board of Education. Had the supreme court not issued the federal mandate of Brown vs. Board of Education in 1954 to enforce integration in public schools, desegregation would not have happened until after the civil rights leaders and activists completed their movement in the mid-to-late twentieth century.
The Supreme Court case of Brown vs. Board of …show more content…

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education. It was a court case in which the Supreme Court ruled that using busing in order to achieve the end of segregation between different races is permitted (). Busing is the “transportation of school district lines” in order to promote desegregation (Shumsky). Busing was the government’s way of interfering in the segregation problem. The government tried to integrate different races by issuing “strict guidelines governing hiring practices, unequal facilities” for African American people (Shumsky). The government interference in the issue of segregation caused many parents to pull their children out of public schools. There were different departments as well that pushed the interaction of different races. The Department of Justice had 500 school desegregation acts that helped desegregation happen. The departments of Health, Education and Welfare took 600 actions to force desegregation (). These departments worked extremely hard to integrate different races. If these departments had acted on this issue earlier, desegregation would have occurred

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