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ivanzaharov [21]
3 years ago
12

How did black women's experience in the Civil Rights Movement affect them afterwards WOMEN IN THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.

History
1 answer:
stich3 [128]3 years ago
6 0

The civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s overturned the trend of "race" segregation in public facilities in the South and won the greatest significant breakthrough in equal-rights legislation for African Americans since Reconstruction (1865–77).

<h3>How did women get equality with the help of the civil right act?</h3>

To address these issues, a second women's rights movement formed in the 1960s. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits employment differentiation based on gender, as well as race, color, national origin, and religion.

Nonetheless, women were still denied jobs based on their gender and were frequently harassed at work. Feminists who were dissatisfied with the lack of progress made by women and the government's lax implementation of Title VII founded the National Organization for Women in 1966.

(NOW). NOW advocated for workplace equality, including equal pay for women, as well as increased female representation in public office, the professions, and graduate and professional degree programs.

Therefore, with the help of the civil right act women experienced equal rights.

For more information about the civil right act refer to the link:

brainly.com/question/18494171

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What did Germany’s horrible and infamous Nuremberg Laws do? no links need help ASAP
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Explanation:

At the annual party rally held in Nuremberg in 1935, the Nazis announced new laws which institutionalized many of the racial theories prevalent in Nazi ideology. The laws excluded German Jews from Reich citizenship and prohibited them from marrying or having sexual relations with persons of "German or related blood." Ancillary ordinances to the laws disenfranchised Jews and deprived them of most political rights.

The Nuremberg Laws, as they became known, did not define a "Jew" as someone with particular religious beliefs. Instead, anyone who had three or four Jewish grandparents was defined as a Jew, regardless of whether that individual identified himself or herself as a Jew or belonged to the Jewish religious community. Many Germans who had not practiced Judaism for years found themselves caught in the grip of Nazi terror. Even people with Jewish grandparents who had converted to Christianity were defined as Jews.

For a brief period after Nuremberg, in the weeks before and during the 1936 Olympic Games held in Berlin, the Nazi regime actually moderated its anti-Jewish attacks and even removed some of the signs saying "Jews Unwelcome" from public places. Hitler did not want international criticism of his government to result in the transfer of the Games to another country. Such a loss would have been a serious blow to German prestige.

After the Olympic Games (in which the Nazis did not allow German Jewish athletes to participate), the Nazis again stepped up the persecution of German Jews. In 1937 and 1938, the government set out to impoverish Jews by requiring them to register their property and then by "Aryanizing" Jewish businesses. This meant that Jewish workers and managers were dismissed, and the ownership of most Jewish businesses was taken over by non-Jewish Germans who bought them at bargain prices fixed by Nazis. Jewish doctors were forbidden to treat non-Jews, and Jewish lawyers were not permitted to practice law.

Like everyone in Germany, Jews were required to carry identity cards, but the government added special identifying marks to theirs: a red "J" stamped on them and new middle names for all those Jews who did not possess recognizably "Jewish" first names—"Israel" for males, "Sara" for females. Such cards allowed the police to identify Jews easily.

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