Essay On Chicano Movement

Words: 488
Pages: 2

Chicano Power The Chicano Movement of the 1960s, also called the Chicano Civil Rights Movement or El Movimiento, was a civil rights movement extending the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement with the goal of achieving Mexican American(Chicano) empowerment. There were many different branches of the Chicano Movement, and many different activist that helped move the activism along. One of the branches of the Chicano Movement was The Youth Movement. The Youth Movement was established due to high dropout rates, lack of schooling, and not enough Mexican American teachers; eventually, Chicano students-as a way to describe their cultural heritage, they began using the label "Chicano"-demanded equal opportunities as the whites. A Chicano activist group, the Brown Berets, formed and publicized their demands for making schools more relevant to people of color. This was just one of many parts of the Chicano movements that made it so significant. Another main movement was The Farmworkers Movement During the 1960's. During this, many Latinos were dealing with discrimination in their jobs as well as in their education. Hispanics were doing backbreaking work for …show more content…
On August 4, 1942, the Bracero Program was signed. The Bracero Program was a series of laws and diplomatic agreements that the United States signed with Mexico the Mexican Farm Labor Agreement. ALl of their efforts and hard work payed off, but there are still farmworkers that are not unionized and are being treated poorly, with terrible living conditions and pay.
The Chicano Movement was important because Latinos, like African-Americans, fought both violently and nonviolently to get accepted for who the were in the United States. Since they were considered a minority group, they were constantly being discriminated against, but the Chicano Power Movement helped them get accepted into today's