50 Years After Historic March, Selma Struggles Economically
SELMA, AL - MARCH 06: School kids walk by a vacant home that is along the historic route that civil rights marchers took during the Selma to Montgomery march on March 6, 2015 in Selma, Alabama. 50 years after the historic civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery where marchers were beaten by State police officers as they crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge, Selma struggles economically and is one of the poorest cities in Alabama with a 10.2 percent unemployment rate and over 40 percent of residents living below the national poverty level. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
PURCHASE A LICENCE
How can I use this image?
$650.00
NZD
DETAILS
Restrictions:
Contact your local office for all commercial or promotional uses. Full editorial rights UK, US, Ireland, Canada (not Quebec). Restricted editorial rights for daily newspapers elsewhere, please call.
Credit:
Editorial #:
465399026
Collection:
Getty Images News
Date created:
06 March, 2015
Upload date:
Licence type:
Release info:
Not released. More information
Source:
Getty Images North America
Object name:
84186287
Max file size:
3000 x 2036 px (25.40 x 17.24 cm) - 300 dpi - 3 MB
- Poverty,
- 1965 Selma Marches,
- 2015,
- Alabama - US State,
- American Civil Rights Movement,
- Black Civil Rights,
- Black History in the US,
- Bloody Sunday - Alabama - 1965,
- Business,
- Business Finance and Industry,
- City,
- City Life,
- Corporate Business,
- Direction,
- Economy,
- Edmund Pettus Bridge,
- Empty,
- Finance,
- Gulf Coast States,
- History,
- Human Rights,
- Lifestyles,
- Marching,
- Memorial Event,
- Montgomery - Alabama,
- Percentage Sign,
- Police Force,
- Politics and Government,
- Selma - Alabama,
- Social Issues,
- Social Justice - Concept,
- Struggle,
- USA,
- Unemployment,
- Walking,