14th Amendment
14th
The Fourteenth Amendment, specifically the Equal Protection Clause
Segregation violated the Equal Protection Clause in the Fourteenth Amendment.
It was the 14th amendment that was violated. The 14th amendment guarantees equal protection of the laws for every US citizen. Since racial minorities were being segregated, it was not an equal protection of the law
Plessy's Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated.(ALS)
The court decided that the segregation of students in schools violated the "equal protection clause" of the fourteenth amendment, because separate facilities were obviously unequal.
The Supreme Court prohibited racial gerrymandering in 1993, holding that the practice violated the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.
The "separate but equal" doctrine is most often held to violate the Fourteenth Amendment, but many have argued it also violates the Thirteenth Amendment by "applying the badge of slavery" to those targeted by segregation laws.
5th and 14th amendment rights were violated
The 14th amendment was created during the Reconstruction Era of the United States. The amendment was meant to protect US citizenship rights as well as enforce equal protection of laws. By nature, segregation of race in schools violated this amendment.
It violates the 1st amendment.
No