AP United States Government!& Politics

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AP United States Government!& Politics Chapter 6: Civil Rights Directions: Simply identify and describe the important terms, places, events, and people listed below. Race and Civil Rights civil rights

National Urban League National Association for the Advancement of Colored People lobbyist

NAACP

An example of a difference in treatment toward certain groups that qualifies as reasonable is a. classifying people according to race. b. taxing different classes at different rates. c. classifying people according to ethnic group. d. testing for AIDS according to class. e. classifying people according to religion. Which statement best summarizes the pertinent question of civil rights? a. Laws cannot make distinctions among people. b. Laws cannot discriminate. c. Laws must treat everyone equally. d. Laws can treat different people differently, but such differences must be reasonable. e. Laws can discriminate as long as they do not make distinctions. The National Urban League has credited civil rights laws for a. improving the number of blacks enrolled in college. b. decreasing the white-black poverty gap. c. increasing the number of black homeowners. d. failing to decrease the black-white unemployment ratio. e. All of the above are correct. AP United States Government & Politics Chapter 6: Civil Rights

The Campaign in the Courts “equal protection of the laws” Civil Rights Act of 1866

SlaughterHouse Cases

separate-butequal doctrine

The Crisis

Brown v. Board of Education Southern Manifesto

de jure segregation

de facto segregation

suspect classification

strict scrutiny

AP United States Government & Politics Chapter 6: Civil Rights

Green case

Swann case

In the Slaughter-House Cases (1873), the Supreme Court ruled a. that the “privileges and immunities” clause of the Fourteenth Amendment did not protect citizens from discriminatory actions by state governments. b. that separate facilities were acceptable as long as they were equal. c. that segregation is unconstitutional. d. that the literacy test is acceptable. e. that juries cannot be all of one race. One reason the NAACP’s strategy of using the courts to further black civil rights worked was that it a. avoided focusing on the clearest abuses. b. presented broad economic demands to whites. c. avoided direct confrontation with a conservative Supreme Court. d. did not require a broad legislative alliance. e. avoided the complications that often surround appellate processes.

The Campaign in Congress civil rights & political agenda

Rosa Parks

civil disobedience

Eugene “Bull” Connor

March on Washington

“preclearance” formula AP United States Government & Politics Chapter 6: Civil Rights

Shelby County v. Holder

The philosophy of civil disobedience suggests that there is value to a. protesting against laws that are not enforced by civil authorities. b. peacefully violating the law. c. violating all laws with respect to civility. d. protesting in a legal manner, with respect for civil authority. e. using violence when laws are not conducive to civil society. One factor helping to break the deadlock that developed in the civil rights movement during the early 1960s was the a. Democratic landslide of 1964. b. Supreme Court’s ruling in Brown v. Board of Education. c. centralization of power in the House and Senate. d. civil unrest that shook several northern cities. e. election of Republican presidents. Women and Equal Rights Seneca Falls Convention

19th Amendment

The Feminine Mystique

reasonableness

intermediate scrutiny

strict scrutiny

Civil Rights Act of 1964

AP United States Government & Politics Chapter 6: Civil Rights

Civil Rights Act of 1972

strict liability

negligent

police powers

In their struggle for equal treatment, women, unlike blacks, had to deal with a legal tradition that a. claimed to be protecting them. b. regarded them as chattel. c. had always treated them as equal in theory. d. had consistently ignored them. e. had accorded them special rights and responsibilities. Women were first given the right to vote in states that were a. more highly populated and economically advanced. b. part of the original thirteen colonies. c. in the South. d. in the Midwest. e. in the West.

Affirmative Action equality of results

affirmative action

reverse discrimination

equality of opportunity

AP United States Government & Politics Chapter 6: Civil Rights

targets/quotas

compensatory action

Supporters of equality of opportunity tend to a. hold views that favor affirmative action policies. b. vote independent in elections. c. live in the New England states. d. have orthodox beliefs on many issues. e. have progressive beliefs on many issues. Unlike the Civil Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) considers a. the impact on local communities. b. qualifications and standards. c. quotas. d. reverse discrimination. e. excessive costs and undue hardships. Gay Rights

and

Looking Back And Ahead

Bowers v. Hardwick Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA)

Proposition 8

In this seminal Supreme Court decision, the Court overturned its decision in Bowers by ruling that state laws may not ban sexual relations between same-sex partners. a. Lawrence v. Texas b. Loving v. Virginia c. Bakke v. California d. Johnson v. Texas e. Boy Scouts of America v. Dale

AP United States Government & Politics Chapter 6: Civil Rights