Concept information
...
social history of crime
courts, corrections, punishments
United States Supreme Court
Supreme Court cases
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higher education law
key organizations (criminology)
United States Supreme Court
Supreme Court cases
...
political science
American politics and society
United States Supreme Court
civil rights and civil liberties
...
social history of crime
courts, corrections, punishments
United States Supreme Court
civil rights and civil liberties
...
criminology
key organizations (criminology)
United States Supreme Court
civil rights and civil liberties
...
higher education law
key organizations (criminology)
United States Supreme Court
civil rights and civil liberties
...
political science
American politics and society
United States Supreme Court
constitutional issues
...
social history of crime
courts, corrections, punishments
United States Supreme Court
constitutional issues
...
higher education law
key organizations (criminology)
United States Supreme Court
constitutional issues
...
criminology and criminal justice
criminology
social history of crime
state and federal court cases
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sociology
social change
activism and social justice
legal and judicial system/human rights/civil rights
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socioeconomic factors
social change
activism and social justice
legal and judicial system/human rights/civil rights
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education in society and culture
multiculturalism and special populations
African American education
legal cases
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education in society and culture
multiculturalism and special populations
African American education
legal cases
social science subjects
sociology
race, ethnicity and migration
legislation, court decisions, and treaties
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social history of crime
courts, corrections, punishments
United States Supreme Court
United States law
Terme préférentiel
Date: 1952Brown v. Board of Education
Définition(s)
- Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954) is the U.S. Supreme Court's most significant ruling on equal educational opportunities and race in American history. Brown I served as the catalyst that led to far-reaching changes not only in schooling-culminating with legislative changes safeguarding the educational rights of women and students with disabilities, among others-but also in the area of civil rights.In Brown I (1954), the Court held that de jure segregation in public schools due solely to race deprived minority children of equal educational opportunities in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. [Source: Encyclopedia of Education Law; Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka]
Concept(s) générique(s)
- African American activism
- civil rights and civil liberties
- constitutional issues
- diversity in education
- educational equity
- educational policies
- education policy
- influences on curriculum studies
- law and public policy
- law, politics, and public policy
- legal and judicial system/human rights/civil rights
- legal cases
- legal issues
- legislation, court decisions, and treaties
- litigation: desegregation and affirmative action
- social justice education
- state and federal court cases
- Supreme Court cases
- United States law
Appartient au groupe
Notation
- Date: 1952
- Date: 1954
- Date: 1955
URI
http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/N9J-KQ767GSD-9
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