Brown v. Board of Education
The Supreme Court (as the Federalists intended) has tended to play a more conservative role in government, often siding with business interests against attempts to regulate commerce through legislation. However, in the public imagination, the court is seen as a crucial part of the civil rights movement, as the institution which finally ended legal segregation in the nation in the landmark case Brown v. Board of Ed. By looking at some of the most important cases to come through the Supreme Court we begin to understand better the dual role the court has played in American history. Earl Warren who was the supreme court justice delivered the ruling in one of the most important rulings in American history which were the Brown v. Board of Education (1954). State-sanctioned segregation of public schools was a violation of the 14th amendment
I chose this article because it was the beginning of the great fight for civil rights that brought people like Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and a host of others. This gave the right for everyone to have the right to the same education or just to go to a school that was in their neighborhood but because it was in the all-white school the black kids could not go.
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