The Legacy of the NAACP’s 1947 UN Petition: Domestic Transformation and Global Resonance
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.61173/0rgqn220Keywords:
NAACP, An Appeal to the World, impact, Civil Rights Movement, Human RightsAbstract
In 1947, the NAACP sent its petition An Appeal to the World to the United Nations, placing the fight of African Americans for equality and rights before the international community. Although the petition did not achieve concrete results, it generated wide influence both at home and abroad. This paper examines its historical significance on three levels. First, during the early Cold War, An Appeal to the World exposed racial discrimination in the United States, pressing the government to issue the report To Secure These Rights and a series of executive orders that advanced civil rights legislation. Second, on the international stage, the petition resonated with decolonization movements, inspiring anti-colonial struggles in Asia, Africa, and Latin America and providing a reference point for human rights debates at the UN. Third, for the NAACP itself, it accumulated transnational resources and experience, laying the groundwork for legal battles such as Brown v. Board of Education. In this sense, An Appeal to the World was not only an unfinished attempt but also a key turning point in the maturation of the American civil rights movement.