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Green v. County School Board of New Kent County : ウィキペディア英語版 | Green v. County School Board of New Kent County
''Green v. County School Board of New Kent County'', 391 U.S. 430 (1968) was an important United States Supreme Court case dealing with the freedom of choice plans created to comply with the mandate in ''Brown II''. The Court held that New Kent County's freedom of choice plan did not constitute adequate compliance with the school board's responsibility to determine a system of admission to public schools on a non-racial basis. The Supreme Court mandated that the school board must formulate new plans and steps towards realistically converting to a desegregated system. ==Legal background== In ''Brown v. Board of Education'' in 1954 the Warren Court ruled that school segregation was unconstitutional. One year later, in Brown II, enforcement of this principle was given to district courts, ordering that they take the necessary steps to make admittance to public schools nondiscriminatory "with all deliberate speed." The term "all deliberate speed" did little to speed up the school board's plan for integration. Circuit Judge John J. Parker led many in the South in interpreting Brown as a charge not to segregate, but not an order to integrate. In 1963 the Court ruled in ''McNeese v. Board of Education'' and ''Goss v. Board of Education'' in favor of integration, and showed impatience with efforts to end segregation.
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