Brown v. Board of Education, 347 US 483 (1954)
There were no "witnesses for the defense" in Brown v. Board of Education. A witness for the defense is someone who testifies in the interest of a defendant in a criminal trial. Brown started as a class action suit, a civil case where a group of plaintiffs with a common complaint take an entity (a person, business, organization, government agency, etc.) to court in order to change the circumstances causing the complaint.
In Brown, the Board of Education of Topeka won the case at the trial stage in US District Court. The NAACP, which represented the families trying to end segregation in the Topeka, Kansas, school district eventually appealed the case to the US Supreme Court. There is no trial, and no testimony given, in an appeal.
The Warren Court ruled segregated schools were unconstitutional in Brown v Board of Education, (1954), and ordered integration to take place "at all deliberate speed" in Brown v Board of Education II, (1955).
brown vs board of education
Brown V. Board of Education
She was the girl that couldn’t go to the close all white school. That is how the brown vs board of education law started!
brown v. board of Which_decision_by_the_Warren_Court_determined_that_separating_children_by_race_in_schools_was_unconstitutional.Ryan
Brown v. Board of Education
Brown v. Board of Education
what did the U.S. Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education refer?
Lead Counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and future US Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall's best-known case as a lawyer may have been Brown v. Board of Education, (1954), which he argued before the Court twice - in 1952 and 1953.For more information on Brown v. Board of Education, see Related Links, below.
Yigcjokoghjkjcdxc
brown v.
*Equal Protection