Types of Segregation
De Facto: segregation that happens in fact although not required by law
The waiting room seen is labeled as white but it is not enforced legally, thus making it de facto. (Google Images: De Facto Segregation)
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This photo is de facto because even though the white residents state that they want only white tenants in the neighborhood it is not upheld by law that it must be so.(Google Images: De Facto Segregation)
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Nearly everyone Caucasian that is in this picture is staring at a lone black girl because they are not used to a colored person's presence and were taught to not welcome them. This learned behavior is de jure because it is not legally supported.(Google Images: De Facto Segregation)
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De Jure : Segregation required by law. I.e. The Montgomery Bus Boycott ACT 1956. The act required that all segregation of public transit was illegal, thus banishing it from the land.
This photo is de jure because the police department (the law), enforces the policy.(Google Images: De Jure Segregation)
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This is de jure because the military was segregated which lets it fall under federal law.(Google Images: De Jure Segregation)
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This is de jure because the "Jim Crow Laws" are a group of actual laws that applied to the public in the South.(Google Images: De Jure Segregation)
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White Response
This is a white response to the desegregation of schools.(Google Images: White Response to Segregation)
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This is a white response to the mistreatment of black people. They are standing up for them by joining in the freedom ride.(Google Images: White Response to Segregation)
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This is a white response to a march.(Google Images: White Response to Segregation)
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The Klu Klux Klan
Also, in addition to the first and third photos above there were more extreme ways of white response. I.e. The Klu Klux Klan was an organization that was organized to protest minority groups. This association was known for burning crosses on the oppressed's lawns as well as burning them at the stake and hanging them.
(Google:kkk)