Disenfranchisement. If that's not what you're looking for, please provide more information/context/clarification to help us answer this question. You can post your response in this answer text by clicking "Edit."
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," African Americans are not allowed to serve on juries in Alabama during that time period. The exclusion of African Americans from juries was a common practice in many Southern states at that time.
They attained equallity in 1955 when the people in Mantogomnry Alabama made a boycott.
When she arrived in Alabama, she faced numerous challenges, including racial discrimination, segregation, and limited opportunities for African Americans. She also faced hostility and prejudice from white individuals and institutions, making it difficult for her to pursue her education and find employment. Additionally, she had to navigate through the Jim Crow laws that enforced racial segregation and limited the rights and freedoms of African Americans.
The Deep south. these states are Louisina, Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia.
poor and havingtrouble finding jobs.forced to leave their homes to migrate to the North, where it wasn't guaranteed they would find better lives.Overall, they just didn't have an equal chancehad less to survive on.
Alabama has no provision for registering any ordinary firearm.
William T. Gay has written: 'Montgomery, Alabama' -- subject(s): African Americans
In 1955, African Americans were still required by a Montgomery, Alabama, city ordinance to sit in the back half of city buses and to yield their seats to white riders if the front half of the bus, reserved for whites, was full.
At 1955, the buses of Montgomery, Alabama, were segregated, which meant that whites sat in the front part of the bus and African Americans sat in the back.
Tom's jury did not contain any African Americans, as they were excluded from serving on juries in Alabama during the time of the trial.
In the Great Migration, which took place in 1910-1930, millions of African Americans "migrated" to the Midwest, Northeast, and West of the United States from Southern states such as Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana. A second movement -- New Great Migration -- has been occurring since 1965 and is essentially the reverse of the Great Migration, with African Americans moving to the "New South" where job growth exceeded that of the North and racism/discrimination has abated.
Samuel D. Campbell has written: 'Letter of Rev. Samuel D. Campbell, of Geneva, Alabama, on African colonization' -- subject(s): Accessible book, African Americans, Colonization