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Summary Civil Society Protests

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Civil Society Protests for Matric 2019 IEB

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  • August 20, 2019
  • 18
  • 2019/2020
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By: willenburga • 4 year ago

not what I was looking for an sadly I was not refunded as one is looking for an essay and not bullet points as the department of education sends memo's in bullet form. so this is a total waste of my money

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By: TaneilThompson • 4 year ago

I did not claim that these notes would include an essay. They are exactly that, notes. They have all the relevant information needed to write your own essay. Please understand that you are in matric and should have skills required to write your own essay. Further, please do not make it out as if you requested a refund, because you did not. :)

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IEB Matric 2019 History
Notes


Theme 3: Civil
Society
Protests USA
Please note that these notes have
been adapted from Mrs Claire
Paterson of SAHETI School as well as
the Oxford ‘In Search of History-
Grade 12’ textbook. They have further
been checked and approved of by Mrs
Claire Paterson



Compiled by: Taneil Thompson

, Taneil Thompson
Theme 3
Civil Society Protests USA (1960’s and 1970’s)

Definitions:
1. Women’s Liberation: freeing women from restrictive controls of a
male-dominated society (socially, economically and politically).
2. Lobby: try to influence influential business and government leaders in
order to bring about change
3. Feminist: comes who fights for women’s rights and freedom of choice
and who believes in gender equality
4. Politicise: to make people aware of political issues
5. Boycott: to refuse to use, but or have anything to do with something
as a form of protest
6. Disenfranchise: to take away the voting right of a group of people
7. Draft: the American term for conscription, compulsory military service
8. Veterans: former soldiers who fought in a war
9. Capitol: building in Washington DC where the US congress
(parliament) is situated.
10. Segregation: the racial separation of all public amenities
11. Supreme Court: the highest court in the US, its function is to
ensure that all star and federal laws are in keeping the principles set
down in the Constitution
12. Federal government: the central or national US government in
Washington DC
13. Lynch: to execute someone without a proper trial, used especially
by the Ku Klux Klan to intimidate African Americans
14. Negotiation: to resolve conflict through dialogue and compromise
15. Marshals: government officials who act on behalf of the courts to
ensure that federal laws are carried out in each state
16. Racial Harmony: different races living in peace with each other
17. Notorious: well-known for bad reasons
18. Ghetto: a poor urban neighbourhood usually housing one ethnic
group
19. Police brutality: using unnecessary violence in carrying out duties
20. Looting: stealing by breaking into shops during a riot
21. Conspiracy: plot
22. Solidarity: togetherness
23. Militant: using, or willing to use, force
SAHETI School, 2019

, Taneil Thompson
24. Entrepreneurship: organising and operating business
opportunities
25. Overt: obvious, blatant
26. Marginalised: treated as less important
27. Civil disobedience: peaceful protest in which people break laws
that they think are unjust or unconstitutional

- World War Two was fought for freedom and democracy
- Western countries feel that they have not been granted that
- mass protests

The Women’s Liberation and Feminist Movements in the 1960s
and 1970s
-started in USA
-Aim: improve status of women and end discrimination based on gender

Position of Women in 1950’s-
-middle class, western women stay home, raise families
-limited career opportunities; nurses not doctors, flight attendants not
pilots; skills undermined, no promotions (95% of managers were men);
worked longer hours, got paid less (40% of a man’s salary)
-get married, lose job

Start of the Women’s Movement in the USA-
-1960’s: attitudes begin to change, young women refuse to be treated as
inferior, want greater independence
-1963: attitude inspired by The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan
published. “American middle class home had become a ‘comfortable
concentration camp’ for women”. People start talking about ‘Women’s
Liberation’.
-1964: Civil Rights Act in the USA outlawing discrimination on the grounds
of race and gender
-1966: law not being properly implemented. Friedan and others set up
National Organisation for Women (NOW).
-NOW held peaceful demonstrations, used petitions, strikes and legal
actions.

SAHETI School, 2019

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