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      • Opponents of forced busing argued that the neighbourhoods to which children were being bused were unsafe and that the children’s overall education would suffer as a result.
  1. The busing controversy accelerated white flight from Boston, with the schools losing almost 50 percent of their student body after 1975 and white students constituting less than 15 percent of the school population, down from more than 60 percent in 1970.

  2. Jul 9, 2019 · After a 1954 ruling declared that segregated schools were unconstitutional, a decades‑long effort to integrate them through busing was often met with violent protests.

    • Lesley Kennedy
    • 4 min
  3. Desegregation busing (also known simply as busing or integrated busing or forced busing) was an attempt to diversify the racial make-up of schools in the United States by sending students to school districts other than their own. [1]

  4. Sep 11, 2019 · In 1971, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of busing as a way to end racial segregation because African-American children were still attending segregated schools.

  5. Jun 29, 2019 · The 1954 US Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Board of Education brought an end to legal racial segregation in schools. But because of demographic trends, white flight to the suburbs and...

  6. In 1974, in response to a suit brought by the NAACP, Judge Garrity decided upon a massive citywide busing plan to bring about greater racial mixture in the schools. One of the most controversial and ill-considered aspects of the plan involved a student exchange between Roxbury High, deep within the ghetto, and South Boston High, whose mainly ...

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  8. Busing came to be the main remedy by which the courts sought to end racial segregation in the U.S. schools, and it was the source of what was arguably the biggest controversy in American education in the later 20th century.

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