What court case established the principle that separate education is inherently unequal? Plessy v. Ferguson Sweatt v. Painter McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Regents Brown v. Board of Education



Answer :

The court case that established the principle that separate education is inherently unequal was Brown v. Board of Education.

The Brown v. Board of Education was a case in which the finding of the Supreme Court of the United States in 1954 was that separate education, that is to say racial segregation in schools, was unconstitutional. This case started when that the Brown family filled a lawsuit against a school that refused to accept their daughter as a student there for considering that she had to go to a blacks-only school. As a result, the Court established the principle that separate education is inherently unequal.

Answer:

Brown vs Board of Education case by Supreme Court of United States was a landmark judgement in 1954 that declared that racial segregation in school was inherently unequal.

Explanation:

The history traces back where Texas had no law school for black students and in order to comply with "separate but equal" law, State of Texas built a law school for blacks. Brown case initiated when Brown family filed a lawsuit against a school that denied admission to their daughter as a student stating that she has to approach only blacks only School.

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