Chapter 21: Civil Rights: Equal Justice Under Law
Section 1: Diversity and Discrimination in American Society
- A Heterogenous Population
- See page 546 to see the ethnic makeup of the U.S.
- More females than males in the U.S.
- Discrimination
- African Americans
- Constitute by far the largest minority group in the U.S. More than 34 million (12.5%)
- Have been the victims of consistently and deliberately unjust treatment for a longer period of time than perhaps any other group of Americans
- Most of the gains minorities in the U.S. are a result of the struggles of African Americans
- Native Americans
- Largest minority in South Dakota
- Disease and warfare devastated Native Americans
- More than 1/3 of them live on reservations today
- Some of the poorest regions in the United States
- Asian Americans
- Chinese laborers were the first Asians brought in large numbers in the 1850s-1860s to work in mines and build railroads
- Japanese relocation in WWII
- 120,000 (2/3 of them) were forcibly moved inland
- Fastest growing minority today
- Over 10 million
- Hispanic Americans
- 34 million, second largest minority
- Mexican Americans
1)Chicanos-those born in this country of Mexican parents
- Puerto Ricans
- Cuban Americans
- Central and South Americans
1)Refugee-one who leaves his or her home to seek refuge from war, persecution, or some other danger
- Discrimination Against Women
- A majority, but have been discriminated against
- Suffrage
- Public office
- Equal Pay Act of 1963
- Requires employees to pay men and women the same wages if they perform the same jobs in the same establishment under the same working conditions
- “Glass Ceiling”
- Women not serving in top level, management jobs
- Until quite recently, only a fairly narrow range of jobs were open to most women
Section 2: Equality Before the Law
- The Equal Protection Clause
- A part of the 14th Amendment
- “No State shall...deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws”
- Reasonable Classification
- Government must discriminate (criminals) but may not do so unreasonably
- The Rational Basis Test
- Does the classification in question bear a reasonable relationship to the achievement of some proper governmental purpose?
- The Strict Scrutiny Test
- Deals with “fundamental rights” or “suspect classifications” (race, sex, or national origins)
- The State must be able to show that some “compelling governmental interest” justifies the distinctions it has drawn between classes of people
- Segregation in America
- Segregation
- The separation of one group from another
- Jim Crow laws
- Aimed at African Americans
- Required segregation by race in the use of both public and private facilities
- The Separate-but-Equal Doctrine
- Created the idea of “Separate but Equal” with the Supreme Court ruling in Plessy vs. Ferguson
- Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka-1954
- Reversed “Separate but Equal” and desegregated schools
- De Jure and De Facto Segregation
- De Jure Segregation
- Segregation by law, with legal sanction
- Abolished by 1970 in public schools
- De Facto Segregation
- Segregation in fact, even though no law requires it
- Housing patterns, condition of schools
- Segregation in Other Fields
- Segregation still exists in public schools
- Classification by Sex
- In the last 30 years, the Supreme Court has found many sex-based statutes unconstitutional
- See cases on page 555
- Laws that treat men and women differently will not be upheld by the courts when:
- They are intended to serve an “important governmental objective”
- They are “substantially related” to achieving that goal
Section 3: Federal Civil Rights Laws
- Civil Rights: Reconstruction to Today
- Civil Rights Act of 1964
- Gained public and political support for the Civil Rights movement
- With its later amendments, it now provides three provisions
- No person may be denied access to or refused service in various “public accommodations” because of race, color, religion, or national origin
- Prohibits discrimination against any person on grounds of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, or physical disability in any program that receives any federal funding
- Forbid employers and labor unions to discriminate against any person on grounds of race, color, religion, sex, physical disability, or age (40-65) in job-related matters
- The Civil Rights Act of 1968
- Forbids anyone to refuse to sell or rent a dwelling to any person on grounds of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, or disability, or to a family with children
- Affirmative Action
- The policy to encourage, in some cases require, employers to recruit blacks, women, and other minorities
- Requires that most employers take positive steps to remedy the effects of past discriminations
- Quota
- Rules requiring certain numbers of jobs or promotions for certain groups
- Federal government jobs
- See Cases on page 558
- 1965 President Johnson issued an Executive Order
- Any contractors and unions doing business with the government had to hire some minorities
- Some led to Reverse Discrimination
- Idea that the majority is discriminated against
- There are some advantages and disadvantages to affirmative action
Section 4: American Citizenship
I. The Question of Citizenship
- Citizenship
- 14th Amendment-all persons born or naturalized in the U.S. are native-born citizens
- Jus Soli-U.S. Territory
- Includes the 50 States, D.C., Puerto Rico, Guam, Virgin Islands, Northern Mariana Islands as well as all American embassies and all American public vessels anywhere in the world
- Jus Sanguinis-right of citizenship by blood-if one of parents has lived in U.S. for at least 10 years (5 years after age of 14)
- Requirements change over the years
- Some citizens have dual citizenship
- Citizenship by Naturalization
- Legal process by which a person becomes a citizen of another country at some time after birth
- More that 250,000 aliens become naturalized American citizens each year
- Requirements for Naturalization
- Entered legally and established five years residence in U.S.-three years if married to citizen
- File a petition for Naturalization with the clerk of a federal district court or of a state court of record
- Read, write, speak English
- Good moral character
- Young people under 18 become citizens when parents do
- Collective Naturalization
- All peoples become citizens if state or territory becomes part of the U.S.
- Loss of Citizenship
- Expatriation
- Losing citizenship
- Rare, example: voting in foreign election or dodging the draft
- A Nation of Immigrants
- Aliens
- People who are citizens of other countries
- Illegal Aliens-enter the U.S. without permission
- Aliens can own property, run businesses, attend public schools, must pay taxes and obey laws
- Aliens can’t vote, serve on a jury, hold public office
- INS-Immigration and Naturalization Service
- Immigration Act of 1990
- Set the number of immigrants who may enter the United States each year at 675,000
- Deportation
- A legal process in which aliens are legally required to leave the United States
- Illegal entry
- Conviction of any serious crime, federal or state
- Undocumented Aliens
- No one knows how many exactly there are in the U.S. today
- Estimates are between 3 and 6 million
- Most come from Mexico
- Douglas, Arizona is a hotspot
- Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986
- Established an amnesty program under which many undocumented aliens could become legal residents
- Made it a crime for anyone to hire any person who is in this country illegally
- Illegal Immigration Restrictions Act of 1996
- Made it easier for the INS to deport illegal aliens
- Tougher penalties for smuggling aliens into this country
- Doubled the size of the Border Patrol by 2002