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topic 7

1

  • Malcolm X took a more militant approach and used violence as self-defense

  • King used a peaceful approach

  • King thought Malcolm was not helping the Black community and was not offering solutions

2

  • Late 1960s: SNCC turned away from nonviolence and made their organization strictly Black

  • Due to institutionalized racism, Blacks had to make their own institutions and focus on Black interest rather than taking an interracial approach

  • Black Power stood for the self determination of Black people in all organizations

3

  • 1966: Black Panther party formed in Oakland, California

  • BP aligned with other people of color US was fighting abroad

  • Focused on employment, housing, education, and rehabilitation

4

  • 1961: National Indian Youth Council founded

  • Advocated for rights of indigenous americans 

  • Start of the Red Power movement which used direct action to protest discrimination

5

  • Chicano Movement confronted discrimination in schools, politics, agriculture, and institutions

  • Mexican American Political Association and Mexican American Legal Defense Fund took inspirations from Black civil rights movement

6

  • Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta known for founding the United Farm Workers of America

  • UFWA helped protest Chicano and Filipino working conditions on American soil

  • Chavez led a 300 mile march from Delano, Cali to Sacramento 

  • Robert Kennedy supported this movement

7

  • Corky Gonzales founded the Crusade for Justice

  • At National Chicano Youth Conference, Plan Espiritual de Aztlan was established which reflected the vision of Chicanos being unified against the US

  • La Raza Unida promoted Chicano nationalism

8

  • Women participated in civil rights and labor movement but became increasingly aware of gender inequality

9

  • 1961: JFK establish Presidential Commision on the Status of Women led by Eleanor Roosevelt

  • Fought for changes in the conditions of women’s opportunities in the US

  • Focused primarily on working, middle class, white women

10

  • Betty Friedan’s the feminine mystique gave a voice to the frustrations of women in America wanting to change the status quo

8

  • Consciousness-raising groups helped validate women’s experiences

  • The personal is political

9

  • 1970: Women’s Strike for Equality sponsored by the National Organization for Women

  • Focused on employment discrimination, political equality, abortion, free childcare, and equality in marriage

  • Movement faced opposition from women who valued the traditional homemaker role and was challenged by minority women who opposed white women’s racism, lesbians vied for more prominence within organizations

10

  • Postwar there was an increase in recreational use of nature

  • Americans became more aware of the consequences 

11

  • Biologist rachel carson’s Silent Spring book expressed that pesticides threatened food ecosystems and how interconnected agriculture and human health were

  • Book was opposed by chemical industries because she was a woman

12

  • 1970: Nixon signed National Environmental Policy Act into law, required environmental impact statements for any project directed or funded by the federal government

  • Nixon created Environmental Protection Agency, first agency charged with studying, regulating, and disseminating knowledge about the environment

13

  • Second Vatican Council called for a more modernized church and bring it closer to the non-Catholic world

topic 7

1

  • Malcolm X took a more militant approach and used violence as self-defense

  • King used a peaceful approach

  • King thought Malcolm was not helping the Black community and was not offering solutions

2

  • Late 1960s: SNCC turned away from nonviolence and made their organization strictly Black

  • Due to institutionalized racism, Blacks had to make their own institutions and focus on Black interest rather than taking an interracial approach

  • Black Power stood for the self determination of Black people in all organizations

3

  • 1966: Black Panther party formed in Oakland, California

  • BP aligned with other people of color US was fighting abroad

  • Focused on employment, housing, education, and rehabilitation

4

  • 1961: National Indian Youth Council founded

  • Advocated for rights of indigenous americans 

  • Start of the Red Power movement which used direct action to protest discrimination

5

  • Chicano Movement confronted discrimination in schools, politics, agriculture, and institutions

  • Mexican American Political Association and Mexican American Legal Defense Fund took inspirations from Black civil rights movement

6

  • Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta known for founding the United Farm Workers of America

  • UFWA helped protest Chicano and Filipino working conditions on American soil

  • Chavez led a 300 mile march from Delano, Cali to Sacramento 

  • Robert Kennedy supported this movement

7

  • Corky Gonzales founded the Crusade for Justice

  • At National Chicano Youth Conference, Plan Espiritual de Aztlan was established which reflected the vision of Chicanos being unified against the US

  • La Raza Unida promoted Chicano nationalism

8

  • Women participated in civil rights and labor movement but became increasingly aware of gender inequality

9

  • 1961: JFK establish Presidential Commision on the Status of Women led by Eleanor Roosevelt

  • Fought for changes in the conditions of women’s opportunities in the US

  • Focused primarily on working, middle class, white women

10

  • Betty Friedan’s the feminine mystique gave a voice to the frustrations of women in America wanting to change the status quo

8

  • Consciousness-raising groups helped validate women’s experiences

  • The personal is political

9

  • 1970: Women’s Strike for Equality sponsored by the National Organization for Women

  • Focused on employment discrimination, political equality, abortion, free childcare, and equality in marriage

  • Movement faced opposition from women who valued the traditional homemaker role and was challenged by minority women who opposed white women’s racism, lesbians vied for more prominence within organizations

10

  • Postwar there was an increase in recreational use of nature

  • Americans became more aware of the consequences 

11

  • Biologist rachel carson’s Silent Spring book expressed that pesticides threatened food ecosystems and how interconnected agriculture and human health were

  • Book was opposed by chemical industries because she was a woman

12

  • 1970: Nixon signed National Environmental Policy Act into law, required environmental impact statements for any project directed or funded by the federal government

  • Nixon created Environmental Protection Agency, first agency charged with studying, regulating, and disseminating knowledge about the environment

13

  • Second Vatican Council called for a more modernized church and bring it closer to the non-Catholic world

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