Social Change Civil Rights

Social Change Civil Rights

... The Civil Rights Movement was an influential period of social turmoil. Vast social changes occurred not only for the African Americans striving for equality, but for our nation as a whole, as many new ideologies were shaped, formed, and fashioned. The film "Eyes on the Prize" exemplifies the revolutionary amends brought on from this era.
In the case of Brown versus Board of Education, the Supreme Court ruled school segregation to be unconstitutional. This landmark case was a stepping stone in the long fought struggle for equal rights. Following the ruling many issues were left unsettled resulting in immeasurable violence, riots, and mobs. However, the main social problem to overcome is that of racism and inequality. Activists faced many dimensions of defiance in federal law, government, and education systems. This was exhibited in Little Rock, when nine African American teens were met by an angry mob as they attempted to attend their newly integrated school. Furthermore, federal law continued to be defied as the National Guard was sent to keep the students out. However, a development in its own occurred when President Eisenhower sent army officers to assist the students into school.
Social change from the movement begins at the individual level and ultimately concludes at the societal level. It also in different aspects touches upon the group, the organizational, and the institutional levels. For society as a whole to accept ethnicity; attitudes, beliefs, and values must first be shaped on the individual level. On the group level patterns of unity and acceptance are necessary to change. Social patterns and structure are essential at the organizational level in the battle for equality. However, I believe the main direction of the movement first sought institutional change essentially leading to a societal change in politics and...

View Full Essay

Related Essays

  • Martin Luther King Biography King utilized his charisma and inspirational tactics to change the views and beliefs of a nation and to lead his people throughout their course of the civil right...
  • Mlk The Man, the Dream, the Legend: Martin Luther King Jr. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. not only spoke with purpose but also with a style unlike any others. He was an i...
  • The Jim Crow Laws The Jim Crow Laws, "The Member of the Wedding", and the Irony of it All In his book, "God's Country; America in the fifties," Ronald Oakley pr...
  • Affirmative Action: Public Opinion Vs. Policy Affirmative Action: Public Opinion Vs. Policy Affirmative Action: Public OPinion vs. Policy When Justin Ketcham, a white college student from the suburbs, thinks ...
  • New Social Movements: Changing America One Step At A Time New Social Movements: Changing America One Step at a Time Politicians and government officials in the United States are supposed to represent the voices in societ...

Saved Papers

Find papers more easily with our Saved Papers feature.

Join Now

Get unlimited access to over 190,000 essays and papers.

Join Now