Policy Record

Browder v. Gayle

A federal court ruled that racial segregation on public buses in Alabama was unconstitutional.

Year 1956President: Dwight D. EisenhowerEra: Civil Rights EraCourt CasePositive
Impact Score20.00

Plain-language summary

What happened and why it matters

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What happened

A federal court ruled that racial segregation on public buses in Alabama was unconstitutional.

Why it matters

EquityStack classifies this policy as positive impact with limited supporting evidence. The record matters because it helps explain how government action shaped Black Americans' rights, resources, exposure to harm, or access to institutions.

Civil RightsConstitutional Rights

What this means

Impact on Black Americans

Ended bus segregation in Montgomery and validated the constitutional claims behind the bus boycott.

1956

A federal court ruled that racial segregation on public buses in Alabama was unconstitutional.

Outcome

Ended bus segregation in Montgomery and validated the constitutional claims behind the bus boycott.

Era context

Previous era-adjacent record: Brown v. Board of Education.

Trust and evidence

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Sources

1

Source Quality

Limited

Completeness

Good

Evidence

Source trail

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Related records

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