+1-316-444-1378

(THIS IS JUST A BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF WHAT I WANT IN GENERAL THE INSTRUCTION AND BELOW)Please use the Chicago Style. This is a abstract however my research paper should be about civil rights movement and its impact on the united stated in terms of social mobility for African Americans, socio-economic growth, racial integration AND whatever else who may want to included. Please included PRIMARY and SECONDARY sources.

I HAVE INCLUDED 2 SOURCES that I was looking at that you might find interring.  Please included them in the bibliography ALONG with whatever else you choose to included

“The Civil Rights Act of 1964.” Harvard Law Review 78, no. 3 (1965): 684-96. Accessed February 8, 2020. doi:10.2307/1339128.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica. Civil Rights Act. Encyclopdia Britannica. Encyclopdia Britannica, inc., January 3, 2019. https://www.britannica.com/event/Civil-Rights-Act-United-States-1964.

An abstract is a summary of a larger project that describes the content and scope, the objective, methodology, and findings, conclusions or intended results. Most academic papers that are published in scholarly journals or presented at scholarly conferences begin with an abstract that is written well before the paper is even researched.
To write your abstract, please complete the following steps:
1.    Prepare a statement of 200-250 words that includes the following (one essay incorporating the – 3 documents you have utilized):
o    The main objective of your project. (You can and should draw upon your research topic statement to develop this point.)
o    The methods you expect to use to explore your project.
    This section can include primary documents, books, and secondary sources.
    It also might include interviews or oral histories, films, or other materials that you might find valuable in researching your project
o    What you think your project will reveal. For example, if you did a research on immigrants, then this statement might include a sense of whether or not the U.S. immigration policies are discriminatory.)
o    Something that others might learn from reading your final essay.