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Jim Crow laws

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15y ago

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Related Questions

How was segregation enforced in the south?

. . . . . . . . . .They were called Jim Crow laws. The name's origin from a black character that was popular in entertainment acts during the mid-1800s, whose name was "Jim Crow".- S0L. . . . . . . . . .


What is another name for Jim Crow laws?

segregation laws or 'separate but equal' laws.


What is another name for racial segregation in Africa?

Apartheid was the official name for racial separation, given by the 1948 Nationalist government of South Africa.


What was a name given to the racial discrimination policies in South Africa through most of the 20th century?

Apartheid. that pretty much means segregation.


What is the name given to the practice of racial segregation in South America from 1948 1994?

if u are reading this u are being lazy open a text book and start reading lazy


What is the name for South African separation of races?

Segregation. Between 1948-1994 a name for it was Apartheid.


What was the name of the South African's government plan of segregation in the twentieth century?

apartheid


Which is a name for a state law that required racial segregation in rail coaches?

Jim Crow laws


What is the new name given to the south?

the south.


What was the name of the south African government's plan of segregation during the twentieth century?

apartheid


What is the knick name for segregation laws?

The nickname for segregation laws, particularly those that enforced racial segregation in the southern United States, is "Jim Crow laws." These laws were named after a minstrel show character and were enacted in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to maintain racial discrimination and inequality, particularly after the Reconstruction era. They mandated the separation of races in public spaces, schools, transportation, and more.


What is the name given for schools that are all one race?

Schools that were all one race in the American South until the late 1950's were legally segregated schools. The laws in Southern states provided for segregation. In the North where neighborhoods determined school assignment the schools were de factosegregated. In other words, not by law, but in fact, because the neighborhoods were segregated.