Brown v. Board of Education: a late and important step to equality On May 17, 1954, at the epochal trial of Brown v. Board of Education, the US Supreme Court unanimously said that racial discrimination in public schools was illegal I declared there was. Given the constant efforts of African Americans to ban apartheid, the court's decision is not surprising. Nevertheless, banning the separation of schools causes intense debate all over the country, encounters strong opposition, violence, inertia in the south, separation of schools by law is mandatory.
Brown v. Board of Education is a historic innovative incident that abandoned apartheid law and established an important milestone in the true equality movement. The Supreme Court unanimously decided that Brown v. Board of Education "separated, but not essentially equal in essence." No one decides that no country has the power to pass the law which deprives the right of the 14th amendment. For my historical analysis, I will use "simple justice" by Richard Kruger. There, "The declaration of independence is impaired by hypocrisy, if it is black, everyone is inequality." His book will help me to learn the policies surrounding and surrounding this incident.
In 1954, Brown v. Board of Education banned state legislation separation law as an important step towards integration and expansion of civil rights. However, not everyone is on board. Two years later, Mississippi Governor James Coleman established a new state agency, the Mississippi Sovereign Council, in response to the Federal Government's decision. Comprehensive monitoring and tactual campaign aimed at overcoming the premise citizenship movement of sister state sovereignty and confusing other groups thought to pose a threat to Jim Crow's position