Citizens Rights Movement - перевод на итальянский
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Citizens Rights Movement - перевод на итальянский

POLITICAL PARTY IN SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS
Concerned Citizens Movement; Concerned Citizens’ Movement

Citizens Rights Movement      
n. movimento dei diritti del cittadino
civil rights movement         
  • [[Bayard Rustin]] ''(left)'' and [[Cleveland Robinson]] ''(right)'', organizers of the March, on August 7, 1963
  • Police attack non-violent marchers on "Bloody Sunday", the first day of the [[Selma to Montgomery marches]].
  • bomb explosion]] on May 11, 1963
  • Martin Luther King Jr. at a civil rights march on Washington, D.C.
  • Leaders of the March on Washington posing before the Lincoln Memorial on August 28, 1963
  • Student sit-in at Woolworth in [[Durham, North Carolina]] on February 10, 1960.
  • Colored Sailors room in World War I
  • [[Emmett Till]]'s mother Mamie (middle) at her son's funeral in 1955. He was killed by white men after a white woman accused him of offending her in her family's grocery store.
  • Film on the riots created by the White House Naval Photographic Unit
  • Andrew Goodman]], [[James Chaney]], and [[Michael Schwerner]]
  • [[Fannie Lou Hamer]] of the [[Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party]] (and other Mississippi-based organizations) is an example of local grassroots leadership in the movement.
  • A mob beats Freedom Riders in Birmingham. This picture was reclaimed by the FBI from a local journalist who also was beaten and whose camera was smashed.
  • School integration, Barnard School, [[Washington, D.C.]], 1955
  • [[James Meredith]] walking to class accompanied by a U.S. Marshal and a Justice Department official.
  • raised fist on the podium]] after the 200 m race at the [[1968 Summer Olympics]]; both wear [[Olympic Project for Human Rights]] badges. [[Peter Norman]] ''(silver medalist, left)'' from Australia also wears an OPHR badge in solidarity with Smith and Carlos.
  • KKK night rally near [[Chicago]], in the 1920s
  • Aftermath of the [[King assassination riots]] in Washington, D.C.
  • White parents rally against integrating Little Rock's schools in August 1959.
  • Will James]], [[Cairo, Illinois]], 1909
  • James Farmer]], January 1964
  • Lyndon B. Johnson signs the historic [[Civil Rights Act of 1964]]
  • alt=Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. speak to each other thoughtfully as others look on.
  • Mural of [[Malcolm X]] in [[Belfast]]
  • The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom at the [[National Mall]]
  • Jewish civil rights activist [[Joseph L. Rauh Jr.]] marching with [[Martin Luther King Jr.]] in 1963
  • [[Mississippi State Penitentiary]]
  • date=August 29, 2017 }}. PBS. Retrieved July 28, 2016</ref>
  • Ku Klux Klan demonstration in St. Augustine, Florida in 1964
  • White segregationists (foreground) trying to prevent black people from swimming at a "White only" beach in St. Augustine, Florida during the [[1964 Monson Motor Lodge protests]]
  • Recreation of Martin Luther King Jr.'s cell in Birmingham Jail at the [[National Civil Rights Museum]]
  • Resurrection City]] was established in 1968 on the [[National Mall]] as part of the Poor People's Campaign.
  • language=en}}</ref>
  • [[Rosa Parks]] being fingerprinted after being arrested for not giving up her seat on a bus to a white person.
  • U.S. Army]] trucks loaded with Federal law enforcement personnel on the University of Mississippi campus, 1962.
  • tried to block desegregation]] at the [[University of Alabama]] and is confronted by U.S. Deputy Attorney General [[Nicholas Katzenbach]] in 1963.
  • In 1954, the [[U.S. Supreme Court]] under Chief Justice [[Earl Warren]] ruled unanimously that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional.
  • Police arrest a man during the [[Watts riots]] in Los Angeles, August 1965
  • housing project]] erected this sign, [[Detroit]], 1942.
  • "We Cater to White Trade Only" sign on a restaurant window in [[Lancaster, Ohio]], in 1938. In 1964, [[Martin Luther King Jr.]] was arrested and spent a night in jail for attempting to eat at a white-only restaurant in [[St. Augustine, Florida]].
  • Armed Lumbee Indians aggressively confronting Klansmen in the [[Battle of Hayes Pond]]
1954–1968 U.S. SOCIAL MOVEMENT AGAINST INSTITUTIONAL RACISM
Civil rights era; American civil rights; U.S. Civil Rights Movement; US civil rights movement; American Civil Rights movement; Civil Rights Movement in the United States; Civil rights of the United States; U.S. civil rights movement; US Civil Rights Movement; American civil rights movement; Civil rights movement in the United States; American Civil Rights Movement; Civil Rights movement; American Civil Rights; United States civil rights movement; Second Reconstruction; African-American Civil Rights Movement; African-American Civil Rights Movement (1965-1968); Civil Rights Movement; American Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968); Black rights movement; American Civil Rights Movement (1955–1968); The Civil Rights Movement; Black equality; Us civil rights movement; Civil Rights era; African-American civil rights; African-American civil rights movement (1955-1968); African American Civil Rights Movement; African American civil rights movement; African American Civil Rights Movement (1955–1968); Southern Freedom Movement; Black rights; Black civil rights movement; African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955–1968); Civil rights in the United States; Civil Rights Era; American Civil Rights Movement (1955–68); African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955–68); African-American civil rights movement; 1960s Civil Rights Movement; African-American civil rights movement (1954-68); African-American civil rights movement (1955–1968); African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968); American civil rights movement (1955–1968); African-American civil rights movement (1954–68); The 1960s Civil Rights Movement; African-American civil rights movement (1954-1968); 1960s civil rights movement; African American Civil Rights Movement (1954–68); African-American Civil Rights Movement (1954-68); African-American civil-rights movement; U.S. Civil Rights; Black civil rights; African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955-68); African American Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968); African-American Civil Rights Movement (1954-1968); African American Civil Rights Movement (1954-68); American Civil Rights Movement (1955-68); American civil rights movement (1955-1968); African-American Civil Rights Movement (1954–68); Black Revolution; American Freedom Movement; Negro Freedom Movement; Negro Revolution; Negro American Revolution; Negro Revolt; Modern Civil Rights Movement; Civil Rights Revolution; African-American Civil Rights Movement (1954–1968); Civil rights for African Americans; African-American civil rights movement (1954–1968); Civil-rights movement; Modern civil rights movement; Civil rights revolution; Black revolution; Negro movement; Negro revolution; Negro American revolution; Negro revolt; Southern freedom movement; American freedom movement; Negro freedom movement; Civil rights struggle; Civil rights of African Americans; Civil rights movement (1954–1968); Civil rights movement (1954-1968); 1954-1968 civil rights movement; 1954-1968 Civil Rights Movement; African-American Civil Rights
movimento per i diritti civili
pro choice         
  • Abortion rights campaigning in the Dominican Republic
  • [[Aleck Bourne]] was acquitted for performing an abortion on a rape survivor in 1938, a landmark case in the movement for abortion rights.
  • 'Legalize abortion now!' Abortion rights banner at the Argentine Parliament, December 10, 2020
  • An advocate for the right to safe and legal abortion demonstrates with a sign.
  • [[Stella Browne]] was a feminist who campaigned for the liberalization of abortion law.
  • The [[United States Supreme Court]] membership in 1973 at the time of ''[[Roe v. Wade]]''
  • protests break out]] following changes to abortion laws in Poland.
SOCIAL MOVEMENT ADVOCATING FOR LEGAL ACCESS TO INDUCED ABORTION SERVICES
Abortion rights; Pro Choice; Pro-Choice; Pro-abortion; Prochoice; Pro choice; Abortionism; Pro-choice; Abortion rights movement; Pro-choice movement; Abortion-rights movement; Support for the legalisation of abortion; Support for legal abortion; Support for the legality of abortion; Support for abortion legality; Abortion proponents; Support for legality of abortion; Support for the legalization of abortion; Pro-choice movements; Pro-abortion movements; Abortion rights movements; Legalisation of abortion; Legalization of abortion; Abortion as a human right; Right to abortion; Pro-abortion movement; Pro-Abortion movements; Abortion-rights advocacy; Pro-choice advocacy; Pro abortion; Right to an abortion
"per scelta", la libertà della donna di interrompere una gravidanza indesiderata

Википедия

Concerned Citizens' Movement

The Concerned Citizens' Movement (CCM) is a Nevis-based political party in Saint Kitts and Nevis. Led by Mark Brantley, it is currently the largest party in Nevis, holding all three seats Nevisian seats in the National Assembly and three out of five seats in the Nevis Island Assembly. The CCM operates only in Nevis and for the 2022 general election is in a One Movement alliance with the People's Action Movement (PAM) operating in Saint Kitts, following the breakdown of the governing Team Unity alliance.