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Methodology | Strengths | Weaknesses |
---|---|---|
Demonstrations and Civil Resistance | • Important in a representative democracy as politicians depend on public votes. • Shows the weight of public opinion. • • Example: The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963 led to the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. • Women's March drew more than 500,000 people to Washington to protest against Trump and to fight for women's rights. | • Small-scale protests on important issues may not have as much of an impact on policy-making because they don't have the representation that 'mass movements' do. |
Legal Methods | • Groups can bring cases to be heard before the Supreme Court, setting precedents that can have a wide-reaching impact on other cases and on American citizens • Supreme Court rulings on public policy can have a significant impact on many people. • Example: Brown v. Board of Education declared segregation in schools unconstitutional. | • The Supreme Court does not have to hear every case; they choose what they will hear, and they cannot enforce decisions themselves. |
Voter Registration Drives | • Involved in educating the public about their voting rights, explaining voting processes, and helping people register to vote. • Movements in the 1960s, 2016, and 2020 led to increased voter turnout among Native Americans and Black Americans. • Example: In 2020, the Black Lives Matter movement was credited with helping to increase Black voter turnout in Georgia, leading to Democratic victories in presidential and US Senate races that gave them control of both houses of Congress and helped President Joe Biden enact his legislative agenda. | • May increase the likelihood of certain groups (e.g., Democrats) being voted in, but it doesn't guarantee change unless those political parties fulfil their promises to make those changes. |
Media and Social Media | • Technology has allowed for pressure to be placed on people in power with indirect methods. • Twitter has grown movements such as #BLM and #MeToo, which have organized mass protests like the Women's March in 2017. • 72% of Black social media users have used social media to promote their causes and remove discriminatory policies. • It is a free platform accessible to everyone. | • Not everyone uses social media, and there is low censorship, which can promote extremist views. |
Year | Event |
---|---|
1787 | The Three-Fifths Compromise allows for the counting of enslaved people as three-fifths of a person when determining state populations. |
1808 | Congress bans the further importation of enslaved people into the USA. |
1857 | The Supreme Court case of Dred Scott v Sandford ruled that Congress does not have the power to ban slavery in the USA. |
1861-65 | The US Civil War leads to the abolition of slavery. |
1865 | The 13th Amendment constitutionally abolishes slavery. |
1868 | The 14th Amendment revokes the Three-Fifths Compromise, guarantees equal rights of US citizens, and includes the Due Process Clause and Equal Protection Clause. |
1870 | The 15th Amendment prohibits the right to vote from being denied on the basis of colour or race. |
1896 | The Supreme Court case of Plessy v Ferguson allows for the separation of white and African American facilities provided they are 'separate but equal.' |
1948 | President Truman signs Executive Order 9981, desegregating the US Army. |
1954 | The Supreme Court case of Brown v Board of Education overturns the 1896 ruling of 'separate but equal,' desegregating US schools. |
1958 | The Loving v Virginia ruling legalizes interracial marriage. |
1963 | Martin Luther King, Jr.'s March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom becomes the largest protest in the capital, with over 250,000 attending. |
1964 | The Civil Rights Act is passed, prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race or colour. |
1965 | The Voting Rights Act is passed. |
1978 | The Supreme Court case of Regents of the University of California v Bakke upholds the use of affirmative actions within limited circumstances. |
2003 | Grutter v Bollinger allows the continued use of affirmative action. |
2020 | George Floyd and Black Lives Matter global protests. |
2022 | Emmett Till Antilynching Act was signed into law. |
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