The Constitution and the Branches of Government Landmark Civil Rights Cases.

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The Constitution and the Branches of Government Landmark Civil Rights Cases

Transcript of The Constitution and the Branches of Government Landmark Civil Rights Cases.

The Constitution and the Branches of Government

Landmark Civil Rights Cases

• Congress + Senate

• Presidency

• Rules

• Qualifications

• Impeachment

• Succession

• SUPREME COURT• Justices serve for life and

are appointed by the President.

• Power of judicial review• Decides what law is• Decides the meaning of

laws.• Not a court of personal

justice ex: Roe v. Wade

Essential Question

• How far should the government go to make sure minorities and women are not discriminated against in jobs, education and housing?

• Use the 14th amendment only? • Busing? • Affirmative action?

Landmark Civil Rights Cases

• DRED SCOTT V SANFORD (1857)

• PLESSY V FERGUSON (1896)

• BROWN V BOARD OF EDUCATION OF TOPEKA, KS (1954)

• BAKKE V UC DAVIS REGENTS (1978)

• PARENTS OF COMMUNITY SCHOOLS V SEATTLE SCHOOL DISTRICT (2006)

The anatomy of a court case: there must be a constitutional issue

at stake Brown v Board of Education (1954)

Plaintiff : person/group who is bringing the lawsuit or on whose behalf

the lawsuit is brought

Accused:

person or group being sued

Year case decided

The court’s decision

• Majority opinion –the decision that most justices voted for. (5 or more)

• Concurring opinion- agrees with majority but for different reasons/part of majority

• Dissenting opinion- the losing opinion but can still be important.

1857: Dred Scott case = Blacks had no standing to sue because they were property

1896: Plessy v Ferguson: “separate but equal”

1954: Brown v BOE: separate is NOT equal, schools must desegregate with “all deliberate speed.” white flight

1971: Swann v Mecklenburg BOE: forced busing to achieve racially balanced schools

2006: Parents of Community Schools v Seattle School District: Students cannot be assigned to schools solely on the basis of race only.

Dred Scott v Sanford (1857) • Sued for his freedom • S C ruled that slaves

were property and thus could never be citizens

• SC rules that therefore, Congress cannot prohibit slavery in the territories.

Plessy v Ferguson (1896):“separate but equal”

• Plessy said that being forced to ride in a “colored” rail car violated the 14th amendment

(= protection clause)• SC ruled 8-1 that separate

facilities did not violate his rights as long as they were “equal.”

PRECEDENT

• Relying on what court decisions said in the past

• Using previous court rulings to decide today’s cases

• But the Warren Court realized that the Plessy decision was flawed and so they overturned it.

Brown v Board of Education (1954)page 708

• Overturned “separate but equal”

• In an 9-0 decision the SC said that separate schools and facilities were inherently unequal.

• Why do you think it was important that this was a unanimous decision?

Result of Brown: MASSIVE RESISTANCE until……….

Eisenhower sends in the troops

Essential Question

• How far should the federal government go to make sure minorities and women are not discriminated against in jobs, education and housing?

• Use the 14th amendment only? • Busing? • Affirmative action? • What do you think?

Controversial solutions:1970’s and 80’s: Busing

Busing protests

Affirmative Action

• A policy which gives special consideration to minorities and women to make up for past discrimination.

TWO TYPES

“GOALS ANDTIME TABLES” QUOTAS

Why was Affirmative Action created?

• “Ability is stretched or stunted by the family that you live with and the neighborhood you live in — by the school you go to and the poverty or the richness of your surroundings. It is the product of a hundred unseen forces playing upon the little infant, the child and, finally, the man.”

Lyndon Johnson, on why he created Affirmative Action

More on Affirmative Action

• “You do not take a person hobbled by chains and liberate him, bring him up to the starting line of a race and then say, ‘you are free to compete with all others’”

Lyndon Johnson

Regents of the University of California v Bakke(1978):

Affirmative Action case p. 818

• Bakke had claimed that racial quotas in admissions had cost him a seat in medical school

• Divided SC ruled that race could be used as a factor in admissions but that quotas were not permissible

CASE

Issues

Plessy v Ferguson

(1896)

p. 290

Brown v. BOE(1954) p. 708

Facts of the case

Law (s) being interpreted

Related cases

(precedent)

Legal reasoning

Impact

Quiz 1

Plessy v Ferguson (1896)

1) 2) 3)

4) The above case established the doctrine of

“ ______________ but ____________”

5) Supreme Court justices are appointed for_________.

Quiz 2• 1) Identify the person

first and last name

• 2) Why did he sue for his freedom? Be specific using names of states, etc.

Quiz 2 - continued

• 3) What was the ruling in the case?

• 4) What effect did the ruling have? (historical impact)

• 5) Supreme Court justices serve for ______