The Civil Rights Act Of 1964
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The
emergence and the vigorous growth of the Black Rights Movement intensified by
the speech of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1963 was crucial in rejuvenating the
Civil Rights movement which was wearing out. The civil rights act of 1964 was created
by legislatures in America with the aim of enforcing the constitutional right of every adult citizen to vote
and more so incorporating the Black Americans who previously didn’t have voting
rights; they also aimed at eliminating discrimination in all public amenities
and facilities like schools, eateries and the transport sector among a few
others in an effort to minimize if not put an end to the racism tendencies that
had quickly cropped and had been spreading amongst the white supremacists. This
Act contained eleven segments which are procedural in nature and offer judicial
interpretations. This essay contains the process of the formation of the Civil
rights movement and the implications of its formation in the American society.
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