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Unit VIB: Civil Liberties and Civil
Rights
Chapters 15 & 16
Chpt. 15 Civil Liberties
Key Terms to Know:
Bill of Rights
Civil liberties
Clear-and-present danger
doctrine
Commercial speech
Due-process clause
Establishment clause
Exclusionary rule
Free-exercise clause
Gitlow v. New York
Incorporation doctrine
Libel
Mapp v. Ohio
Miranda v. Arizona
Patriot Act
Obscenity
Prior restraint
Probable cause
Search warrant
Slander
Symbolic speech
Essential Questions to Answer:
How does politics and culture affect civil
liberties?
How important is the first amendment?
What is speech?
Who is a person?
Is there separation between church and
state?
What is due-process?
Civil Liberties versus Civil Rights
civil liberties involve restraining the
government’s action against individuals
civil rights are rights all individuals
share as provided for in the 14th
amendment, which guarantees equal
protection under the law
Civil Liberties
First Amendment of Bill of Rights
religion, speech, press, assembly, petition
Fourteenth Amendment
due process clause
incorporation—applying the Bill of Rights to
the states
incorporation began in 1897
most significant parts of Bill of Rights have
been incorporated
The Constitutional Basis for Our
Civil Liberties
Safeguards in the Original Constitution
Guarantee of Habeas Corpus
No bill of attainder
No ex post facto law
The Bill of Rights
Function is to protect the rights of
minority groups against the will of the
majority.
The Incorporation Issue
Incorporating the Bill of Rights
© 2004 Wadsworth Publishing / Thomson Learning™
Equality Concepts
Legal equality: law is the same for everyone
Equality of opportunity: everyone has same
chance to use abilities, work hard, and
succeed
Equality of conditions: guarantee of certain
level of material conditions; most
controversial
Religion: Establishment
Government is prohibited from officially
establishing a religion
Questions regard the endorsing religion
1962: no time for voluntary prayer in public
school
1963: no Lord’s Prayer in public school
2000: no official prayer before high school
football games
Freedom of Religion
separation of church
and state
comes from the 1st
Amendment
establishment clause
contemporary conflicts:
state aid to churchrelated schools
school voucher
programs
prayer in schools
posting the Ten
Commandments
teaching evolution
religious speech
free exercise
Freedom of Religion
The Establishment Clause
Prayer in the Schools- Engel v. Vitale (1962)
Evolution versus Creationism- Epperson v.
Arkansas
Aid to Parochial Schools- Lemon v. Kurtzman
(1971)
The Free Exercise Clause
Belief and Practice are Distinct- Reynolds v.
U.S.
Religious Practices and the Workplace- Title
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Freedom of Expression
permitted restrictions
speech that presents a “clear and
present danger”
speech that might lead to some “evil”
(the bad tendency rule)
no prior restraint
protected speech
commercial speech
symbolic speech
Freedom of Expression
unprotected speech
obscenity
child pornography
pornography on the Internet
slander
fighting words and heckler’s veto
campus speech
Freedom of Expression
Early Restrictions on Expression
Seditious speech - Dennis v. United States
Limited Protection for Commercial Speech
Limited protection provided by the First
Amendment.
Unprotected Speech
Libel and Slander
“Fighting Words”
Obscenity - Miller v. California (1973)
1998 Child Online Protection Act
2000 Children’s Internet Protection Act
Go to: http://www.aclu.org
Unprotected Expression
“Fighting” words
Profanity
Obscenity
“prurient interest in sex”
no “literary, artistic, political, or scientific
value”
Libel and slander
must be actual malice against public officials
and figures
Freedom of the Press
press has some protection from libel charges
libel must be accompanied by actual malice
the press is now protected from gag orders
during trials, except in unusual circumstances
radio and t.v. have much more limited 1st
Amendment protections
they are subject to the equal time rule
they are subject to the personal attack rule
Freedom of the Press
Clear and Present Danger
Schenck v. United States
Bad-tendency Act
Gitlow v. New York
The Preferred-Position Doctrine
Prior Restraint
Censorship: The Court argued that the government
cannot curb ideas before they are expressed.
Freedom of Assembly
The Right to Assemble and
Petition the Government
protected by the 1st Amendment
can be limited by municipalities’ right to
offer permits for marches
has been tested by anti-loitering
ordinances aimed at reducing gangs
from congregating
online security
Privacy Rights and Abortion
no explicit right to privacy in Constitution
Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) -- Supreme
Court rules that privacy rights exist
comes from the 1st, 3rd, 4th, 5th and
9th Amendments
Roe v. Wade (1973) court rules that privacy
rights include abortion rights
the Court has taken on a more restrictive
view of the rights outlined in Roe
The Right to Privacy
Implied by the First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, and
Ninth Amendments.
The Abortion Controversy
Roe v. Wade (1973) - woman’s right to
terminate her pregnancy.
Do We Have the “Right to Die”?
Washington v. Glucksberg (1997)
Privacy Rights in an Infotech Age
Go to: http://www.cdt.org
Go to: http://www.epic.org/privacy
Other Privacy Rights
right to die
“living wills”
physician-assisted suicide
security issues after 9/11/01
Rights of the Accused
no unreasonable search and seizure
exclusionary rule
probable cause for arrest
no coerced confessions
no illegal interrogation
no entrapment
informed of rights, including silence
Miranda warnings
Rights of the Accused,
writ of habeus corpus
prompt arraignment
legal counsel
(cont.)
Gideon V. Wainwright, 1963
reasonable bail
informed of charges
Rights of the Accused,
(cont.)
speedy, public trial before a jury
impartial jury representative of community
no compulsory self-incrimination
adequate counsel
no cruel or unusual punishment
right to appeal convictions
no double jeopardy
The Rights of the Accused Recap:
The Rights of Criminal Defendants
Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable search and
seizure.
Fifth Amendment right against double jeopardy.
The Exclusionary Rule
Mapp v. Ohio (1961)- illegally obtained evidence is not
admissible.
The Miranda Warnings
Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.
The Right to Counsel
Gideon v. Wainwright (1963)- If accused of a felony, an attorney
must be made available at the government’s expense.
No Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause
Eighth Amendment also prohibits excessive bail and fines.
Go to: http://supremecourtus.gov
States that Allow the Death Penalty
© 2004 Wadsworth Publishing / Thomson Learning™
The Politics of Homeland Security
Should We Carry National Identification
Cards?
Americans at Odds over Civil
Liberties
Should Hate Speech on Campus Be
Banned?
Is America One Nation “under God”?
Should Americans Be More Concerned
about the Erosion of Privacy Rights?
Go to: http://www.vote-smart.org/issues
Discussion
Why is the Fourteenth Amendment so
important to civil liberties?
Should prayer be encouraged in public
schools?
Should religious accounts of the creation of
life be given equal time with evolution?
What are some important freedom-of-speech
issues on campus?
Have the courts done too much to protect the
rights of the accused, or not enough?
Review Key Terms: Generate a court case (fictional) that
addresses ALL of the key terms below. Good Luck!
Bill of Rights
Civil liberties
Clear-and-present danger
doctrine
Commercial speech
Due-process clause
Establishment clause
Exclusionary rule
Free-exercise clause
Gitlow v. New York
Incorporation doctrine
Libel
Mapp v. Ohio
Miranda v. Arizona
Patriot Act
Obscenity
Prior restraint
Probable cause
Search warrant
Slander
Symbolic speech
Essential Questions we Should Have
Answered by Now:
How does politics and culture affect civil liberties?
How important is the first amendment?
What is speech?
Who is a person?
Is there separation between church and state?
What is due-process?
Lets Tackle These:
1.
Should it be all right for religious symbols to be displayed on
government property?
2.
If a person confesses to a crime, is there any reason why the
confession should not be used in court?
3.
How much can the government do to fight terrorism?
Chpt. 16 Civil Rights
Key Terms to Know:
Affirmative action
Brown v. BOE
Civil rights
Civil Rights Act 1964
Civil rights movement
De facto segregation
De jure segregation
14th Amendment
Freedom rights
MLK, Jr.
Montgomery bus boycott
NAACP
Nonviolent civil disobedience
Plessy v. Ferguson
Reasonableness standard
Roe v. Wade
Rosa Parks
Separate-but-equal doctrine
Sit-ins
Strict scrutiny standard
Swann v. CharlotteMecklenburg BOE
Voting Rights Act 1965
Essential Questions to Answer:
What was the “Black Predicament”?
How do the courts influence civil rights?
How does Congress influence civil rights?
What is the stance for women and equal
rights?
What is affirmative action?
Civil Rights History
Constitution originally supported slavery
1857 Dred Scott
13th and 14th amendments
Jim Crow laws
1896: separate but equal doctrine
Civil Rights History (cont.)
Segregation common in 20th century
1910: NAACP forms
1954: Brown v. Board of Education
Civil rights movement
Civil Rights Act of 1964
Voting Rights Act of 1965
Equal Rights Amendment not ratified
What is being represented in this chart?
Civil Rights
all rights rooted in the Fourteenth
Amendments’ guarantee of equal
protection under the law
what the government must do to
ensure equal protection
what the government must do to
ensure freedom from discrimination
Key Points of the Civil Rights Acts of
1865 to 1875
The First Civil Rights Act (1866)
extended citizenship to anyone born
in the United States
gave African Americans full equality
before the law
authorized the president to enforce
the act through use of force
Key Points of the Civil Rights Acts of
1865 to 1875, (cont.)
The Enforcement Act of 1870
set out specific penalties for
interfering with the right to vote
The Anti-Ku Klux Klan Act (1872)
made it a federal crime to deprive an
individual of his or her rights
Key Points of the Civil Rights Acts of
1865 to 1875, (cont.)
The Second Civil Rights Act (1875)
everyone is entitled to equal
enjoyment of public accommodation
and places of public amusement
imposed penalties for violators
The Civil Rights Act were nullified
through…
The Civil Rights Cases (1883)
th
the Supreme Court rules that the 14
amendment only prevents official
discriminatory acts by states, not by
private individuals
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
stated that segregation did not violate the
14th amendment
established the separate-but-equal doctrine
provided constitutional justification for
racial segregation, especially in the South
Barriers to Voting by African
Americans
the white primary – a state primary election in which
only whites may vote
allowed because Southern politicians claimed
political parties were private entities
was outlawed by the Supreme Court in 1944
(Smith v. Allwright)
grandfather clause – restricting voting to individuals
who could prove that their grandfathers had voter
prior to 1867
was used to exempt whites from poll taxes
was used to exempt whites from literacy tests
Barriers to voting by African
Americans
(cont.)
poll taxes – required the payment of a fee to
vote
intended to disenfranchise poor African
Americans
was outlawed in national elections by the
24th amendment
was outlawed in all elections by the
Supreme Court in 1966
literacy tests -- required potential voters to
read, recite or interpret complicated texts
intended to disenfranchise African
Americans
Ending Legal Segregation
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954) –
Supreme Court rules public school segregation
violates the 14th amendment
overturns Plessy v. Ferguson
Brown v. Board of Education (1955) – orders
desegregation “with all deliberate speed”
court–ordered busing: transporting African American
children to white schools and white children to African
American schools to end de facto segregation
Court-ordered busing – transporting African American
children to white schools and white children to
African American schools
Modern Civil Rights Legislation
Civil Rights Act of 1964
forbade discrimination on the basis of race, color,
religion, gender and national origin in
voter registration
public accommodations
public schools
expanded the power of the Civil Rights
Commission
withheld funds from programs administered in a
discriminatory way
established the right to equality of opportunity in
employment (created the EEOC)
USPS continues to have the largest number of EEO
complaints filed of all Federal agencies, 2003.
Charges of
Discrimination
© 2004 Wadsworth Publishing / Thomson Learning™
The Civil Rights Movement
Rosa Parks Montgomery, Alabama 1955
Martin Luther King, Jr. leads boycott
King’s philosophy of nonviolence
Civil rights activists emulate King’s use of
Mahatma Ghandi’s tactics of civil disobedience
Birmingham protest, 1963
March on Washington, 1963
“I Have a Dream” speech
Black Power movement
Malcolm X
Modern Civil Rights Legislation,
(cont.)
Civil Rights Act of 1968
forbade discrimination in housing
Voting Rights Act of 1965
outlawed discriminatory voter registration
tests
authorized federal registration and
administration of voting where
discrimination had taken place
resulted in massive voter registration drives
of African Americans in the South
Women’s Struggle for Equal
Rights
Women’s Suffrage Movement
was connected to the abolition movement
suffragists organized the first women’s
right convention at Seneca Falls, NY in
1848
established women’s suffrage associations
finally won passage of the Nineteenth
Amendment in 1920
Title IX
Seneca Falls Memorial
Women’s Struggle for Equal
Rights,
(cont.)
The Modern Women’s Movement
spurred in by the publication of Betty Friedan’s
The Feminine Mystique ( 1963)
connected to the civil rights movement of the
1960’s
argued for ratification of the Equal Rights
Amendment
failed to win the necessary states for ratification
has targeted gender discrimination by challenging
policies and laws in federal courts
has advocated and encouraged an increasingly
prominent role for women in government and
politics
“The right of citizens
of the United States to vote shall not be denied or
abridged by the United States
or by any State on account of sex.”
Gender-Based Discrimination in
the Work Place
gender discrimination – any practice, policy or
procedure that denies equality of treatment
to an individual or group because of gender
prohibited by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
of 1964
applies even to “protective policies,” policies
designed to protect women of child-bearing
age
Gender-Based Discrimination in
the Work Place,
(cont.)
sexual harassment – unwanted physical or verbal
conduct or abuse of a sexual nature that
interferes with a recipient’s job performance OR
creates a hostile environment OR
carries and implicit or explicit threat of adverse
employment consequences
wage discrimination – women earn 76 cents for every
$1.00 earned by men
the glass ceiling – the phenomenon of women
holding few of the top positions in professions or
businesses
Affirmative Action
a policy in educational admissions or job
hiring
gives special consideration or compensatory
treatment to traditionally disadvantaged
groups
is an effort to overcome present effects of
past discrimination
Bakke decision, 1978: reverse discrimination
Supreme Court: “strict scrutiny”
Gratz v. Bollinger
Grutter v. Bollinger
Beyond Equal Protection—
Affirmative Action
Affirmative Action Tested
Regents of the University of California v.
Bakke (1979)
Reverse Discrimination - quota system?
Affirmative Action Is under Attack
Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena
(1995)
Hopwood v. State of Texas (1996)
Special Protection for Older
Americans
Population Projections
Attempts to Protect Older Americans
Age Discrimination in Employment Act
of 1967 – prohibits discrimination on
the basis of age unless age is shown
to be a bona fide occupational
qualification
Mandatory Retirement – is prohibited
in most occupations by an
amendment to the ADEA (1978)
More and more old people
© 2004 Wadsworth Publishing / Thomson Learning™
Protecting Older Americans
-
Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967
Obtaining Rights for Persons with Disabilities
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990- most
significant legislation protecting the rights of
this group.
Requires that all public buildings and services be
accessible to persons with disabilities.
Go to: http://www.aarp.org
Go to: http://www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada/adahom1.htm
Securing Rights for Persons with
Disabilities
The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
requires all public buildings and services be
accessible to persons with disabilities
requires employers make reasonable
accommodations for people with disabilities
defines “disabilities” as physical or mental
impairments that substantially limit
everyday activities
Supreme Court ruled that an HIV infection falls under
the protection of the ADA
conditions that can be medically corrected
(medication, glasses) do not fall under ADA
The Rights and Status of Gay Males
and Lesbians
in decades past, most states had anti-sodomy laws
most laws now have been repealed
the Supreme Court upheld a law in Bowers v.
Hardwick (1986) that made homosexual conduct
between two adults a crime
in Romer v. Evans (1996) the Supreme Court ruled
that a Colorado amendment that invalidated state
laws protecting homosexuals violated the equal
protection clause
now 12 states and 165 municipalities have laws that
protect gay men and lesbians from discrimination
The Gay Community and Politics
Gay Men and Lesbians in
the Military
1993 Clinton policy
was characterized as
“don’t ask, don’t tell”
Supreme Court will
likely rule on the issue
Same-sex marriages
the Hawaii Supreme
Court ruled that
denying marriage
licenses to gay couples
might violate the equal
protection clause of
the state constitution
in a referendum,
voters in Hawaii
opposed allowing
same-sex marriages
the Vermont legislature
has passed a law
allowing same-sex
“civil unions”
Child Custody and
Adoption
courts now no longer
deny custody or
visitation to persons
solely on the basis of
sexual orientation
Ethnic changes in population
© 2004 Wadsworth Publishing / Thomson Learning™
Hispanics
Party Identification and Electoral Significance
The largest ethnic minority in the United States.
Mexican-Americans and Puerto Ricans tend to
identify with the Democratic Party. CubanAmericans support the Republican Party for
their anti-Castro position.
Political Participation
Hispanic voter turnout is only about 27 percent
compared to 50 percent for the population at
large.
Go to: http://www.latinosvote.com/
Other Ethnic Groups
Asian Americans
http://www.sunfiregroup.com/
Native Americans
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/9118/
The Rights and Status of Juveniles
parents are viewed as protectors of children’s rights
the 26th amendment grants 18-21 year olds the right
to vote
most contracts entered into by minors cannot be
enforced
parents can be held liable for minor’s negligent
actions
minors are sometimes viewed as incapable of
criminal intent
when minors are tried as adults, they are afforded
the same protections, but are subject to adult
penalties (including the death penalty)
The Politics of Homeland Security
Racial Profiling in the War on Terrorism
Discussion
In what circumstances is bilingual education
warranted?
What still needs to be done in the area of civil
rights?
Should gays and lesbians have the same
rights as heterosexuals?
Should affirmative action be extended?
Abolished?
What policies are necessary to promote
gender equality?
Key Terms to Know:
Affirmative action
Brown v. BOE
Civil rights
Civil Rights Act 1964
Civil rights movement
De facto segregation
De jure segregation
14th Amendment
Freedom rights
MLK, Jr.
Montgomery bus boycott
NAACP
Nonviolent civil disobedience
Plessy v. Ferguson
Reasonableness standard
Roe v. Wade
Rosa Parks
Separate-but-equal doctrine
Sit-ins
Strict scrutiny standard
Swann v. CharlotteMecklenburg BOE
Voting Rights Act 1965
Essential Questions we Should Have
Answered by Now:
What was the “Black Predicament”?
How do the courts influence civil rights?
How does Congress influence civil rights?
What is the stance for women and equal rights?
What is affirmative action?
Lets Tackle These:
1.
Should numerical goals ever be used to ensure that
students and workers are drawn from every racial group?
2.
To what extent should the government be able to limit the
opportunity to have an abortion?
Key Concepts to Remember:
1.
2.
The Bill of Rights was added to the Constitution
to protect individual rights from encroachment
by the federal government.
Since the 1920’s, the 14th Amendment’s Due
Process clause has been interpreted to include
most of the protections guaranteed in the Bill of
Rights and to prevent states from infringing on
those rights. This is known as the Incorporation
Doctrine and the process is called “selective
incorporation.”
Key Concepts to Remember:
3. The rights conferred by the Constitution are not
absolute, and the extent of protection afforded by
the Constitution has varied over time depending
on a variety of political conditions, including the
composition of the Supreme Court. It is the S.C.
that plays the major role, but not the only one, in
guaranteeing individual rights and liberties.
Ultimately, the nature of the rights and liberties
enjoyed by Americans is determined through the
political process.
Key Concepts to Remember:
4. Civil liberties are legal and constitutional protections
against the government. Civil rights are policies that
extend basic rights to groups historically subject to
discrimination.
5. Americans have never fully come to terms with the concept
of equality and the Equal Protection clause of the 14th
Amendment. With the abandonment of the “separate but
equal” doctrine in 1954 and the rise of the civil rights and
women’s movements, the federal government has leaned
toward policies aimed at tearing down the barriers
represented by racial and other forms of discrimination.
These policies, however, continue to stir major
controversies within society as illustrated by the ongoing
debate over affirmative action programs.