Passive resistance , picketing , mild civil disobedience , voting. The Radicalized part of the movement used violence and intimidation, and were a cross Dr. King had to bear , as these follks were a detriment to the Civil Rights Movement.
The Freedom Riders.
Encouraging people, i.e. to boycott buses.
Malcolm x used violence to gain civil rights. He was the leader of the black panther.
Yes and no. If it used as part of Civil Rights Movement it should be (part of a special group). If it is used generically, then it would not be.
African-Americans used a combination of boycotts, sit ins and marches early in the Civil Rights movement to challenge Jim Crow laws and gain equal rights. Activists also pushed for and won legislation that struck down barriers in education, housing and employment.
The nonviolence used by civil rights activists was a good tactic to highlight the violence experience by black in the south. The media would record the passive civil rights activist being harmed and the more the violence was out in the open the better for the movement. .
The Freedom Riders.
Encouraging people, i.e. to boycott buses.
bus trips through the South promoting civil rights
no they used legal challenges
One of the least effective methods used by activists during the civil rights movement was the reliance on legal challenges without accompanying public mobilization. While court cases like Brown v. Board of Education were significant, the lack of grassroots support often hindered their implementation and enforcement. Additionally, some protests that lacked clear messaging or community involvement failed to galvanize widespread support, limiting their impact. Overall, methods that did not engage the broader public or utilize a strategic combination of legal, political, and grassroots efforts tended to be less effective.
Many of the leaders of the American civil rights movement took inspiration from the methods used by anticolonial leaders.
The NICRA (Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association) used peaceful methods such as marches, sit-ins, and protests to advocate for civil rights and equality for the Catholic minority in Northern Ireland during the 1960s. They also engaged in nonviolent civil disobedience to challenge discriminatory practices and policies.
They were civil rights leaders and used non violent methods of revolution.
The Ku Klux Klan (KKK) was not inspired by the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s; rather, it actively opposed it. The KKK sought to maintain white supremacy and used violence and intimidation against civil rights activists and African Americans. Unlike groups advocating for equality, the KKK aimed to uphold segregation and racial discrimination, directly contradicting the goals of the civil rights movement.
African American civil rights activists in the 1950's shared one common goal, which was equal rights and to be able to walk freely without being discriminated against.
Malcolm x used violence to gain civil rights. He was the leader of the black panther.