What is the United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division (CRD)?
The United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division is a the specific branch of the United States Department of Justice responsible for the administration and oversight of Federal matters and affairs concerning the civil rights belonging to both individual citizens, as well as the collective citizenship of the United States of America.
The Equal Rights Act of 1957 and the CRD
The passing of the Equal Rights Act of 1957 marked both the granting of the right to vote to African Americans, as well as the inception of the Civil Rights Division of the USDOJ; although the Equal Rights Act of 1957 was met with disfavor by segregationists, the act served to even further the proliferation of civil rights within the United States – once signed by former President Eisenhower, the Civil Rights Division became the Federal Agency responsible for the enforcement of this legislation.
Government Agency of the Executive Branch
Government agencies are defined as organizations, councils, and offices operating under the jurisdiction of the Federal Government of the United States of America; each federal agency retains specific administrative jurisdiction over specific facets latent within the operations of the United States Government.
Agencies Associated with the United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division
Government agencies are defined as organizations, councils, and offices operating under the jurisdiction of the Federal Government of the United States of America; each federal agency retains specific administrative jurisdiction over specific facets latent within the operations of the United States Government:
What is the United States Department of Justice?
The Department of Justice is a federal agency within the Executive Branch of the government responsible for the supervision of the United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division, which is considered to be a sub division within the USDDOJ.