The US Civil Rights Movement was a nation-wide program that lasted from the 1950s to the 1960s. Led by the African Americans and their supporters, the movement was aimed to overcome racist policies that denied their civil rights. Activists used a variety of methods including court cases, boycotts, marches and civil disobedience in order to accomplish this. The Civil Rights Movement as a whole showed the value of uniting people to fight for their rights in non-violent methods, which influenced Australian activist Charles Perkins to conduct his own campaign in Australia, called the 1965 Freedom Ride. The 1965 Freedom Ride was aimed to raise awareness of discrimination against Australian Indigenous people.
The US Civil Rights Movement introduced a number of African American activists who have been a great
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The event went from 1956 to 1957 in Montgomery, Alabama, and was said to be a “successful 381-day boycott to desegregate its buses”. In December 1955, Rosa Parks, an African American, violated the segregate law of not sitting at the back of the bus with the rest of the African Americans, and was therefore sentenced to jail. This event sparked Martin Luther King, and being the president of the Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA), he, as well as several African Americans, protested against this by gathering African Americans and boycotting the city’s buses. Eventually in November 1956, the Supreme Court were in favour to MIA’s case for desegregation, and with the agreement of bus companies, the boycott concluded on 20 December 1956. The success of the Montgomery bus boycott campaign inspired Charles Perkins to conduct the same case in the 1965 Freedom Ride campaign in Australia, in which he had used a bus to travel and desegregate racist towns such as Walgett, Moree and