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The Civil Rights era is losing its grip on young Americans

The Civil Rights era is no longer the central reference point for how many young Americans understand race, justice and power — a generational shift reshaping politics, education and activism in the U.S.

Why it matters: America's racial conversation is moving from a shared historical narrative to a fragmented, individualized one, increasingly shaped by social media, personal identity and real-time events.


  • The last of the Civil Rights-era activists are aging, while most Americans today struggle to name important leaders in the movement or identify important moments in the struggle beyond Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
  • Even then, the share of Americans who say they know a great deal or a a fair amount about King's "I Have a Dream" speech is dropping, especially among younger Americans, suggesting that those words are fading from memory.

State of play: Younger Americans are now several generations removed from the Civil Rights Movement's defining moments, encountering its history less through classrooms or legacy media and more through algorithms and short-form video.

Zoom in: Fewer than half of U.S. states require comprehensive teaching of the Civil Rights Movement in K–12 education.

  • Young adults are significantly less likely than older Americans to say they learned much about civic history, including civil rights, in school, and scored poorly on basic civics questions.
  • Social media now rivals classrooms as the primary source of information about race and inequality for Americans under 30.

The intrigue: Trump's move to systematically unravel former President Lyndon B. Johnson's civil rights legacy, from voting rights to desegregation to affirmative action, has met little protest on college campuses.

  • Instead, students have joined protests around Gaza or Trump's immigration crackdown — moments that are trending for the time.
  • Anger over Trump's civil rights rollbacks is often expressed on social media, where algorithms reinforce outrage and rarely produce durable political change.

What they're saying: "They're armchair, so-called revolutionaries — more comfortable doing their troublemaking on Instagram," Maria Varela, 85, an activist with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), tells Axios.

  • Varela said many young people confuse posting with organizing, door-knocking and coalition-building.
  • "There is a deliberate attempt to discount, disconnect and erase history," Martin Luther King III tells Axios. "

Yes, but: Even as civil rights memory erodes in schools, younger Americans are still encountering the movement through different channels, Deborah D. Douglas, author of "U.S. Civil Rights Trail: A Traveler's Guide to the People, Places, and Events that Made the Movement," tells Axios.

  • "Just because young people don't frame their stories the way we did doesn't mean they're not doing the work. They're doing it in a way that's authentic to their lived experience today."
  • King stressed that there's more information about the Civil Rights Movement online than there has ever been.

The intrigue: King and his wife, Arndrea Waters King, have launched the "Realize the Dream Initiative" to encourage young Americans to volunteer 100 million hours of service to celebrate MLK's 100th birthday by 2029.

  • Arndrea Waters King said volunteer have already logged nearly 20 million hours of service.

What we're watching: Diverse coalitions of young voters have helped elect New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani and other progressives to office.

  • Arndrea Waters King urged critics to pay attention to the way Gen Z is are responding to civil rights. "It's different now."
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