Desegregation in a sentence as a noun

How the **** did a school desegregation case keep going until a couple months ago?

Can you call desegregation revolutionary since it was just "doing the right thing?

Yeah, those people in the 50s who fought against desegregation just had a different personal opinion on what was okay.

" Sentence inflation happened in the aftermath of desegregation, race riots, and white flight.

When he tried to campaign against ending desegregation in Albany, he had very little success.

There is no coincidence that suburban flight coincided with desegregation.

Our incarceration rate is mostly a backlash against desegregation.

Abolition, women's suffrage, civil rights, desegregation, women's rights, gay rights - in every case, a low-status class of people promoted to more equal rights.

The separate school districts of Birmingham suburbs aren't exactly due to corruption... many of them emerged in the 1950s-70s as a way of evading desegregation.

He actually drove through Arkansas on a university research field trip right when desegregation was beginning to be enforced and saw the National Guard in place to enforce it.

Unless you are anti-abortion, anti-gay marriage, anti-desegregation, then yeah, you might think it's terrible.

Consider when the governor of Alabama, George Wallace, took a stand against federal court ordered desegregation of the University of Alabama.

The old law of unintended consequences and all. Those of us who were in school in the 70s during mandatory desegregation will recall that too had the opposite effect of what was intended: instead of providing better learning opportunities for black students the white families left for the suburbs leaving the black students behind in worse schools than what they had started out with.

You think one day all the white people said "Hey, wait a minute!Pretty much exactly this, between school desegregation and the construction of interstates through the cities that made suburban commutes easier.> Yes, and eventually those places will end up like Detroit.

He compared the replicability of findings in particle physics, ostensibly one of the most rigorous domains of physics, with those of several areas in psychology, including the effect of teacher expectations on students’ IQ scores, gender differences in verbal and spatial ability, the effects of desegregation on educational achieve- ment, and the validity of student course evaluations.

After decades of suburban exodus the core cities are shells of their former selves, urban public school districts are almost exclusively for the poor, etc. There's lots of non-racist reasons, today, to not want to live in the city besides the inherent availability of lawns, etc. But given how racist society as a whole was in 1960, I think it's ridiculous to claim that the racial tension precipitated by the civil rights movement and desegregation didn't play a large role in tipping the balance between the cities and suburbs.

Desegregation definitions

noun

the action of incorporating a racial or religious group into a community

See also: integration integrating