What Are The Differences In African American Women's Rights Movement

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Throughout the 20th century Native Americans, African Americans and American women have fought for equal rights in both social and political realms, and have often used similar methods obtaining their goals. While these three entities had differences in ethnicity, they were often fighting for similar liberties, personal freedoms and equalities. Social movements were often the means of method, as were non-violent demonstrations, marches, boycotts and use of the legal system. Unfortunately, often times the non-violent protests ended in violence and often due to government force.
The Progressive Era gave us women such as Jane Addams, Emma Goldman and Margaret Sanger. Each fought tirelessly to make their visions reality. Foner states that although they couldn’t vote in most states during this time, they were playing very active political roles during the first two decades of the twentieth century and that Woodrow Wilson would not have been reelected in the 1916 Presidential election without the votes of the women as he carried ten of the twelve states that had approved woman suffrage. Jane Addams began what we now consider ‘social work’ by working to have legislation passed to assist in such social services to help mothers care and support their children, regulating housing and laboring conditions and working to gain assistance for poor immigrant families. Addams also worked for women’s suffrage, as did Margaret Sanger. It was illegal to give women
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The Double-V movement started by blacks returning home after fighting in World War II, was another organization focused on racial equality. With the victory over the Germans and Japanese, they now looked towards winning their own victory over segregation on the home