Over the past century, Black Americans and Mexican Americans have overcome many obstacles to achieve and protect equal rights. In 3–5 sentences, evaluate which policy, movement, or Supreme Court case you feel was the most significant in the fight for equality.

You could pick from the following to focus on: (Unit 4 Lesson 8)
Brown v. Board of Education
Removed separate but equal
Allowed for integration of schools
Moved toward allowing equal financing of schools
Voting Right Acts of 1965
Ended Jim Crow segregation
Ensured equality at the ballot box
Ended voting limits
NAACP
An organization that pushed for equal rights
Helped pass the Civil Rights Act
Civil Rights Act of 1964
first law that addressed civil rights since the end of the Civil War
made discrimination illegal

The most significant policy, movement, or Supreme Court case in the fight for equality for Black Americans and Mexican Americans was the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This law made discrimination illegal and addressed civil rights issues that had been present since the end of the Civil War. This groundbreaking legislation paved the way for further progress in the fight for equality and laid the foundation for other important civil rights victories, such as the Voting Rights Acts of 1965. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a crucial step towards ensuring equal rights for all Americans, regardless of race or ethnicity.