30
Jan
The U.S. civil rights movement—broadly defined as the prolonged struggle to secure equal protection, voting access, and social inclusion for African Americans and other marginalized groups—has reshaped modern institutions and culture across law, public policy, business, education, media, and global human-rights discourse. Legal victories, legislative reforms, protest tactics, and cultural production emerging from the movement created durable frameworks for addressing discrimination and set precedents for subsequent movements for gender, disability, LGBTQ, immigrant, and Indigenous rights.Legal and Constitutional ImplicationsThe movement transformed constitutional law and institutional enforcement mechanisms in ways that still govern everyday life.Key judicial landmarks: Brown v. Board of Education…
