| Civil rights or positive rights are those legal rights retained by citizens and protected by the
government. Examples include the right to vote and anti-discrimination laws. Civil rights movements usually want equal protection of the laws for minorities, as well as new laws outlawing discrimination and its
vestiges. Civil rights effectively upholds the values of positive
liberty.
United States
Main article: American Civil Rights
Movement
Civil rights struggles in the US have been dominated by racial politics. Although
slavery was abolished and freed slaves were given the right to vote in 1865, southern states used laws and vigilantism to maintain black Americans as a
non-voting lower caste often subject to totalitarian rules of conduct. The federal government, while aware of the situation, had limited jurisdiction
over these matters and feared the political effects of provoking the South. A breakthrough came when president Harry S. Truman integrated the armed forces by executive order in 1948. This action
prompted a broad movement throughout the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s to enforce the civil rights of black Americans.
Other civil rights trends in the US include the increasingly liberal interpretation of the Bill of Rights, the protection of laborers from abuse by employers. The abortion
controversy in the US has been described as a civil rights issue, although each side claims to protect the rights of a different
group.
Northern Ireland
Main article: Northern Ireland Civil Rights Movement
In Northern Ireland the Civil Rights Movement developed in the
1960s among nationalists in Northern Ireland who demanded an end to Unionist discrimination, in the form of the gerrymandering of local electoral districts to ensure the victory of unionist candidates in areas with nationalist majorities, and in discrimination in the awarding of local authority
housing. Tentative steps to address these issues by Terence O'Neill
was met with vehement opposition from extremist Protestants, most notably
Ian Paisley. Frustration at the lack of reform and the heavy-handed tactics
of the RUC and the British army pushed
many Catholics towards the IRA. Failure to tackle these issues led to the dissolution of the
Northern Ireland government and to the political violence which has plagued Northern Ireland since. One of the leaders of the
Civil Rights Movement was future Nobel Peace Prize winner
John Hume, another, Austin
Currie, a candidate for President of Ireland in
1990. Hume's co-Nobel Laureate, David
Trimble, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party in the
1990s and 2000s, called the Northern Ireland of
the 1960s a "cold house for Catholics".
Women's rights movements
- to be written: see Feminism, Women's lib
Homosexual rights movements
- to be written: see Stonewall riots, Gay liberation
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