Scenarios about 'busing'
The practice of transporting students to schools outside their local districts to achieve racial integration, particularly prominent in the United States from the 1960s to 1980s. Busing emerged as a controversial implementation of desegregation following the Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education decision, sparking significant social tensions, protests, and debates about educational equality, community autonomy, and the government's role in addressing racial segregation.
What If Busing Never Happened?
Exploring the alternate timeline where court-ordered school desegregation busing never became a nationwide policy in the United States, potentially altering the course of civil rights progress, educational equality, and racial integration in America.
What If School Integration Was More Successful?
Exploring the alternate timeline where American school desegregation achieved broader success, potentially transforming race relations, educational outcomes, and social inequality in the United States.