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This 10 page paper considers the impact of the decision in Brown v. Board of Education. This paper relates the decision to issues of racism in the 1950s and 1960s and the factors that led to the Civil Rights Movement. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
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10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHBrownv.rtf
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and turbulent 1960s were marked by repeated efforts to define equity, both in the social setting and the educational setting, and this impacted both legal decision-making and the development of
social and educational institutions. Though the American education system has been a part of the central directive of the government for over a century, the development
of a call for equity in the educational process came as an extension of educational reforms implemented in the 1960s (Kantor 278). Since the 1960s, attempts to improve the
standards for public education, especially in urban schools, have been a part of both liberal and conservative politicizing and the failure to successful implement reforms has been linked to economic
and societal issues (Kantor 278). The most notable change initiated in the 1960s, though, was a call to address the need for a concentration on reform for poor and
minority inner-city schools in order to improve the urban labor force and address claims of racial inequities in the educational process (Kantor 278). The Brown Decision Brown v.
Board of Education, 349 U.S. 294 (1955), began the struggle to implement desegregation laws in schools since it was found that schools were neither promoting segregation nor desegregating themselves.
However, the victory that Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka represented in the Black community did not carry over to the majority communities. Most communities were reluctant to
implement desegregation "with all deliberate speed" (Supreme Court opinion, 1955, 294). In fact, it was believed that most educational settings were more than just slightly reluctant to implement changes.
At the time, little recognition was given to cases involving higher education, but their precedence was exactly what the NAACP needed in their efforts to whittle away at the
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