Fair Housing
The Civil Rights Act of 1866 prohibits discrimination in housing based on:
ARace, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, and familial status
BRace and national origin only
CRace only✓ Correct
DAll protected classes
Explanation
The Civil Rights Act of 1866 prohibits discrimination in property rights based on race only. It has no exemptions, unlike the Fair Housing Act of 1968 which covers more protected classes but has limited exemptions.
Related Arizona Fair Housing Questions
- The 'Mrs. Murphy exemption' to the Fair Housing Act in Arizona applies to:
- A real estate agent who tells prospective buyers that a neighborhood is 'changing' in a way that implies racial or ethnic composition as a reason to buy or sell is engaging in:
- A lender refuses to make mortgage loans in a specific low-income neighborhood regardless of individual applicant qualifications. This practice is called:
- Under the Fair Housing Act, a housing provider who discriminates based on a protected class is subject to penalties including:
- An Arizona real estate agent shows a minority buyer only properties in one area of the city, even though the buyer expressed interest in other neighborhoods. This is BEST described as:
- An Arizona property manager refuses to rent to a prospective tenant with a service animal, citing a strict 'no pets' policy. This is MOST likely a violation of the Fair Housing Act's provisions regarding:
- The federal Fair Housing Act was enacted in which year?
- Under the Fair Housing Act, 'familial status' protection was added to the original 1968 law in:
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