The terms below are drawn from the articles
contained in this journal and do not reflect the
much broader issue of race in the U.S. in all its complexity.
Affirmative action
A term coined during the Kennedy
Administration (1961-63). At that time, the U.S. government
directed federal contractors to take "positive steps" to ensure a
racially representative workplace. It has grown to include legal
and social efforts to improve educational and economic
opportunities for members of minority groups.
An American Dilemma
Classic 1944 work on the
status
of blacks in American society, written by Swedish social
scientist Gunnar Myrdal. Interweaving economics and sociology,
the book suggested that widespread discrimination was responsible
for the low status of blacks in the United States, and attacked
racial segragation. Sparking national debate when it appeared,
it helped define race relations for the half-century and more
thereafter. (See Myrdal, Gunnar)
Black Power
A movement among African-Americans, begun in the mid-1960s,
that
emphasized racial pride and called for the creation of black
political and cultural
organizations.
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954)
U.S.
Supreme
Court decision that
prohibited segregation in public schools and unanimously declared
that "separate facilities are
inherently unequal."
Bus boycott
(See Montgomery Bus Boycott)
Busing
The transportation of children by bus to
schools
outside the neighborhoods in
which they live to achieve racial integration.
California Civil Rights Initiative (Proposition
209)
A
California state law that largely
prohibits discrimination or use of preference programs by the
state of California and local
governments in that state. No individual or group defined by
race, gender, color, ethnicity
or national origin may receive special treatment in public
employment, public education or
public contracting.
Civil Rights Act of 1964
National legislation that
prohibits
discrimination in voting,
employment, public accommodations and facilities, and public
schools, and provides for
enforcement of desegregation.
Civil rights movement
The use of boycotts, sit-ins,
marches,
and other forms of
nonviolent protest in the 1950s and 1960s to demand equal
treatment under the law and an
end to racial prejudice.
Color-blind
Used in this sense to describe a
society that does
not form opinions or take
actions based on the color of people's skin.
Douglass, Frederick (c.1818-1895)
Escaped slave,
author and
orator who devoted his life
to the abolition of slavery and the fight for equal rights for
African-Americans and women.
Douglass founded the antislavery newspaper The North Star in
Rochester, New York, in
1847. During the American Civil War (1861-65) he urged blacks to
serve in Union Army,
and he discussed the problems of slavery with President Abraham
Lincoln.
DuBois, W.E.B. (1868-1963)
Historian and
sociologist who used
scholarly research to
advance the political status of African-Americans. DuBois was a
founder of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and an
early proponent of
Pan-Africanism, the belief that all people of African descent
have common interests and
should work together to advance those interests.
Emancipation
Refers to the Emancipation
Proclamation issued by
President Abraham
Lincoln on January 1, 1863, which freed all slaves in states that
had seceded from the
Union.
Enterprise zones
Designated areas that receive tax
incentives
and direct funding to
stimulate economic development.
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
An
agency of
the U.S.
government established by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to enforce
nondiscrimination in
employment.
Equal opportunity
The principle that no person
should be
discriminated against because
of race, gender, religion, or other inherent attributes.
Executive Order No. 11246
On September 24, 1965,
President
Lyndon B. Johnson signed
an order requiring federal agencies to contract only with
companies that take affirmative
action in the hiring and advancement of their minority employees.
The Secretary of Labor
was charged with enforcing the order. (An executive order is a
rule, regulation, or
instruction issued by the President of the United States that has
the binding force of law upon
federal agencies.)
Freedom riders
Nonviolent black and white
protesters who
traveled by bus through the
American South in 1961 to challenge race-based separation of
facilities at bus and rail
terminals. In November of that year the U.S. Interstate Commerce
Commission prohibited
segregated public accommodations.
Head Start
A government-sponsored program
established in 1964
that helps preschool
children from low-income families prepare for school by offering
social, educational, and
mental and physical health services.
Immigration Act of 1965
National law that abolished
the
national origins quota system
for granting immigrant visas. Under national origins, the
number of people from a given
country already living in the United States determined the number
of future immigrants. The
new law established allocation of immigrant visas on a first
come, first served basis, subject
to certain exceptions. As a result, the U.S. immigrant
population since 1965 has been much
more diverse than it was previously.
Kerner Commission (National Advisory Commission on Civil
Disorders)
An 11-
member bipartisan commission created by President Lyndon B.
Johnson in July 1967 to
advise his administration following race riots that had erupted
in cities across the United
States. In March 1968, the Kerner Commission reported that the
United States was "moving
toward two societies, one black, one white
separate and
unequal," and it recommended
massive government intervention against unemployment, poor
housing and poverty. The
commission was chaired by Governor Otto Kerner of Illinois.
King Jr., Martin Luther (1929-1968)
A Baptist
minister and
leader of the civil rights
movement, he was influenced by the philosophy of non-violence of
the famous Indian activist
Mahatma Gandhi. When King was assassinated in 1968, citizens in
many major cities
reacted violently --- while others held vigils and peaceful
gatherings. Americans, black and
white, wondered what would happen to the vision he articulated in
his landmark I Have a
Dream speech delivered on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in
Washington, D.C., in
1963.
Million Man March
A gathering of upwards of one
million
African-American men that
took place in Washington, D.C., on October 16, 1995. Participants
came to the rally to
pledge themselves to self-reliance, self-improvement, and respect
for women, and to
demonstrate unity and a commitment to support each other. The
initiative for the event came
from Louis Farrakhan, Leader of the Black Muslim Nation of
Islam.
Montgomery Bus Boycott
Boycott of the public bus
system in
Montgomery, Alabama, in
protest of the general requirement in the southern United States
that African-Americans sit in
the back of buses. The boycott lasted 381 days from December 1955
until December 1956,
when the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a lower court decision that
such segregation violated
the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
Myrdal, Gunnar (1898-1987)
Swedish social
scientist, economist, educator, statesman, author. A double
Nobel laureate, he was co-recipient of the 1974 Economics Prize,
and, with his wife Alva, a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in
1982 (See An American Dilemma)
Preference program
A program, designed to achieve a
social
objective, in which certain
participants identified by race, gender or other primary
characteristic, are granted an
advantage or preference.
Proposition 209
(See California Civil Rights
Initiative)
Racial preference
The practice of granting
advantageous
treatment to a person or group
based on considerations of race.
Renewal communities
Under legislation that is
pending in the
U.S. Congress, up to 100
of the poorest communities in the United States would be
designated "renewal communities."
They would receive aid in the forms of tax relief, regulatory
reform,
savings incentives, and scholarships.
Reservations
Areas of land set aside by the
government for
Native Americans (American
Indians). Reservations were established originally to allow
Indians to preserve their own life
styles without conflict with European Americans. In the 19th
century Indians were often
confined to reservations. Indians who today choose to live on
reservations often do so to
preserve their particular culture, including forms of Indian
self-governance.
Reverse discrimination
Charges of unfair treatment
often made
by those believed to have
benefitted from past discrimination. Thus some white males, who
as a class historically have
benefitted by their race and gender in previous years, may
believe they have been denied
access to education or employment because of preferences given to
members of minority
groups or women.
Set-aside
The practice of reserving a specific
number of
places in a program, or a
percentage of economic activity, for persons of a particular
(minority) status.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
Provision
of
national law that specifically bans
discrimination in employment. Because the number of
African-Americans hired did not
increase significantly, Title VII was amended in 1972 to require
employers to take active
measures (affirmative action) to compensate for past
discriminatory practices.
Tuskegee Airmen
The first black aviators in the
U.S. military.
Their training in 1941 at
facilities in Tuskegee, Alabama, and subsequent service, was
separate from other U.S.
military pilots. The Tuskegee Airmen, who numbered almost one
thousand before the end of
World War II, achieved an exceptional combat record.
Voting Rights Act of 1965
National law that made
illegal a
variety of practices used by
local authorities to keep blacks from exercising their right to
vote. It outlawed educational
requirements, including literacy tests, and authorized federal
supervision of voter
registration. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 strengthened the
voting provisions of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964.
Young, Andrew (1932- )
A clergyman and civil rights
leader who
gained prominence as
one of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s lieutenants in the civil rights
movement. Andrew Young
served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1972 until 1977;
he was the first African
American to serve as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations
(1977-79). Young was mayor
of Atlanta, Georgia, from 1981 to 1989 and co-chair of the
Atlanta Committee for the 1996
Olympic Games.