The correct answer to this open question is the following.
The strategies that movement activists employed in their efforts to transform Albany, Birmingham, and the nation were the use of nonviolent marches, protests, and demonstrations such as taking the streets to demand civil rights for African Americans and other minorities. They also used litigation and sits-ins. People from all backgrounds, including students, participated in these demonstrations.
The resistance they met was the fact that many white people saw these demonstrations as a risk to the status quo, and demanded the police to stop the demonstrations and arrest the people that participated in those events. That is why, activist leaders like Dr. MartinLuther King, ended up in jail, in Birmingham jail, where he wrote his famous "Letter From Birmingham Jail."
<span>Native Americans were forced from their traditional lands onto reservations.</span>
Sparta was a warrior society in ancient Greece that reached the height of its power after defeating rival city-state Athens in the Peloponnesian War (431-404 B.C.). Spartan culture was centered on loyalty to the state and military service. At age 7, Spartan boys entered a rigorous state-sponsored education, military training and socialization program. Known as the Agoge, the system emphasized duty, discipline and endurance. Although Spartan women were not active in the military, they were educated and enjoyed more status and freedom than other Greek women. Because Spartan men were professional soldiers, all manual labor was done by a slave class, the Helots. Despite their military prowess, the Spartans’ dominance was short-lived: In 371 B.C., they were defeated by Thebes at the Battle of Leuctra, and their empire went into a long period of decline.
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The Russian Revolution when they overthrew Tsar Nicholas II.