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Later in Reconstruction, Congress would determine that, under the Fourteenth Amendment, it had the authority to outlaw private practices that interfered with the promise of equal citizenship, including victimization by racially motivated violence and exclusion from hotels, transport, and other public venues. But, as we will see, the Supreme Court would apply a rigid understanding of state action to weaken dramatically the amendment’s impact.
The Second Founding: How the Civil War and Reconstruction Remade the Constitution
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