The change in the United States is not common, of course it is related to the rights of women. Women's rights seem to have won the war (Haas), but the Americans are not aware that the war is not over. "When you learn about gender inequalities, such as unequal wages, Americans want a change" (Tran). Wage inequality is only one of the problems in dealing with inequality. Feminism can solve these problems. Feminism once changed the number of the United States. As the years passed, feminism continued to change women's treatment with American society.
In this article we will explore the relationship between the civil rights movement and the feminist agenda of the second wave of feminist feminism. I will also explain how women are shaping civil rights movement and how we redefine femininity by how we relate to sports. In 1952, Brown and the Kansas Topeka University Board of Education proposed again a separate but equal law. This case is based on isolation of educational facilities. The National Coloration People Development Association will focus on integrating higher education facilities into a comprehensive elementary school. After the change, the National Color Improvement Association intervened in this case and thought that the isolation of educational facilities had declined to black students due to inequality and in the 14 th revision they violated the protection of equality protection. On May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court ruled that separation of schools was inherently inequality and violated the 14 th revision.
From the 1960s to the 1970s, the second wave of feminism became increasingly divided into two different ideological movements, equality rights feminism and radical feminism. In equal rights of feminism, its aim is to respect legislation and laws such as equality with men in the political and social realm, legalization of men and efforts to make women depend on the same labor force as men . On the other hand, radical feminism hopes to fundamentally change society fundamentally as a patriarchal treatment. There was a difference between age and ethnic group in the wider feminist movement of those days. Feminists with equal rights are largely white, elderly, and mostly from wealthy careers. A radical feminist formed a young and wealthy young woman, as well as women of ethnic minorities of all ages, who also actively participated in the civil rights movement.