Civil rights can be defined as the right for individuals to be equal. Such equality includes equal employment rights, right of justice, right to be released from harsh treatment, and discrimination against Caucasian in various ways. These rights include education, voting rights, employment, gay marriage, dwelling and so on. Civil rights include the rights of gays and lesbians, the retention of women's voting rights and status in the workplace, African-Americans and Hispanics. Historically, the civil rights movement is a struggle, protest and demonstration by African-Americans in a non-violent way to achieve white human equality.
American civil rights movement, political, legal, and social struggle that blacks make for complete citizenship and racial equality. The civil rights movement, first of all, was apartheid, a challenge to the black-and-white laws and customs that white people used to dominate blacks after the abolition of slavery in the 1860s. During the civil rights movement, individuals and civil rights groups challenged discrimination against apartheid through a variety of activities, including protest march, boycott, and refusal to comply with apartheid law. Many people believe that when it began with a boycott of the Montgomery bus in 1955 and ended with the 1965 basketball bill, there was a controversy as to whether it ended and ended. The civil rights movement is also known as the Black Freedom Movement, the Black Revolution, and the Second Rebuilding.
Like the American African American civil rights movement, the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland in the 1960s struggled to achieve social reform peacefully. The campaign began in 1967 when the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) was founded to eliminate discrimination. It is worth noting that this movement was consistent with the era of Northern Ireland's history and the support of the Republican Republic of Ireland is weakening due to the movement of the Catholic population's focus. Because of terrible social conditions, they are more interested in real improvements in their daily lives than in other parts of Ireland.
Fifty years ago, hundreds of nationalist protesters gathered at Duke Street in Londonderry. Their announcement was organized by the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (some inspired by the American civil rights movement). The organizers decided to protest in any case, because dissatisfaction with a wide range of discrimination was long complaining. Protestor Deird Odorty told the BBC that he fled to a coffee shop to "strike the police to leave, leave and concentrate". Blood dropped off in the baton, "she said. "He is very young and he looks very vicious, I have not seen so many disgusting faces in my life."