Civil rights movement
The legal and political architecture of the African American civil rights movement, 1948-1968: landmark cases, statutes, and movement strategy for the FSOT.
From Plessy to Brown
The constitutional pivot of the civil rights movement was the dismantling of the "separate but equal" doctrine announced in Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896). That doctrine licensed state-mandated segregation for fifty-eight years. The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, led by Thurgood Marshall, executed a deliberate litigation strategy, first attacking inequality in graduate and professional education (Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada, 1938; Sweatt v. Painter, 1950; McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Regents, 1950) before challenging segregation itself.
The culmination was Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, 347 U.S. 483 (1954), in which a unanimous Court under Chief Justice Earl Warren held that "separate educational facilities are inherently unequal," violating the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Brown II, 349 U.S. 294 (1955), ordered desegregation "with all deliberate speed"—a formula that invited delay and "massive resistance," exemplified by the 1957 Little Rock crisis, when President Eisenhower federalized the Arkansas National Guard to enforce integration at Central High School under the authority later affirmed in Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1 (1958).
The Executive and the Cold War Context
Federal action preceded Brown. President Truman desegregated the armed forces by Executive Order 9981 (July 26, 1948) and barred discrimination in federal employment by Executive Order 9980. The Cold War sharpened the stakes: Jim Crow was a propaganda liability abroad, a point the Justice Department made explicitly in its Brown amicus brief. Diplomats and FSOs should grasp this linkage between domestic civil rights and U.S. credibility in the decolonizing world—a recurring FSOT theme connecting US Society to foreign policy.
Mass Mobilization
Litigation was matched by direct action. The Montgomery Bus Boycott (December 1955–December 1956), sparked by Rosa Parks's arrest and sustained for 381 days, produced Browder v. Gayle (1956), which struck down bus segregation. Martin Luther King Jr. emerged as its leader and co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in 1957. The Greensboro sit-ins (February 1960) launched the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC); the Freedom Rides (1961) tested Boynton v. Virginia (1960); and the Birmingham campaign (1963), with its televised images of fire hoses and police dogs under Bull Connor, galvanized national opinion. King's "Letter from Birmingham Jail" (April 1963) articulated the moral case for civil disobedience against unjust laws. The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom (August 28, 1963) drew roughly 250,000 people and produced King's "I Have a Dream" address.