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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Clegg, Roger, Rosenberg, John S.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ984446
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author Clegg, Roger
Rosenberg, John S.
author_facet Clegg, Roger
Rosenberg, John S.
Clegg, Roger
Rosenberg, John S.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Against "Diversity" Clegg, Roger Rosenberg, John S. Evidence Affirmative Action Educational Benefits Court Litigation Reverse Discrimination Equal Education Selective Admission Admission Criteria College Admission Student Diversity Etiology Administrative Principles The Supreme Court has granted review for the 2012 term in the case "Fisher v. University of Texas." Abigail Fisher, a rejected white applicant to the University of Texas, has challenged the use of racial and ethnic admission preferences, which the Court had allowed in its 2003 decision involving the University of Michigan law school, "Grutter v. Bollinger." The claim that "diversity" requires that each classroom be diverse is both novel and radical in its implications, as Judge Edith Jones noted in a blistering dissent for herself and four Fifth Circuit colleagues. In any event, new evidence and new developments make it appropriate for the Court to reconsider the holding in Grutter that the purported "educational benefits" from student body "diversity" justify the use of racial and ethnic preferences in the first place. Numerous amicus briefs urge it to do so, and the plaintiff herself explicitly raises that possibility. According to the proponents of this sort of discrimination, "diversity" is the mother's milk of higher education, more important, it would seem, than books in the library or professors behind the podium. Who could oppose such a noble concept? The authors contend that they could, and give ten reasons why other people should, too. They include not only some first principles to which they hope the Court will return, but also the emerging social science evidence that the costs of this discrimination are high and the claimed benefits--which the Court accepted in 2003--minimal at best. (Contains 28 footnotes.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ984446
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2012
record_format eric
spellingShingle Against "Diversity"
Clegg, Roger
Rosenberg, John S.
Evidence
Affirmative Action
Educational Benefits
Court Litigation
Reverse Discrimination
Equal Education
Selective Admission
Admission Criteria
College Admission
Student Diversity
Etiology
Administrative Principles
Against "Diversity" Clegg, Roger Rosenberg, John S. Evidence Affirmative Action Educational Benefits Court Litigation Reverse Discrimination Equal Education Selective Admission Admission Criteria College Admission Student Diversity Etiology Administrative Principles The Supreme Court has granted review for the 2012 term in the case "Fisher v. University of Texas." Abigail Fisher, a rejected white applicant to the University of Texas, has challenged the use of racial and ethnic admission preferences, which the Court had allowed in its 2003 decision involving the University of Michigan law school, "Grutter v. Bollinger." The claim that "diversity" requires that each classroom be diverse is both novel and radical in its implications, as Judge Edith Jones noted in a blistering dissent for herself and four Fifth Circuit colleagues. In any event, new evidence and new developments make it appropriate for the Court to reconsider the holding in Grutter that the purported "educational benefits" from student body "diversity" justify the use of racial and ethnic preferences in the first place. Numerous amicus briefs urge it to do so, and the plaintiff herself explicitly raises that possibility. According to the proponents of this sort of discrimination, "diversity" is the mother's milk of higher education, more important, it would seem, than books in the library or professors behind the podium. Who could oppose such a noble concept? The authors contend that they could, and give ten reasons why other people should, too. They include not only some first principles to which they hope the Court will return, but also the emerging social science evidence that the costs of this discrimination are high and the claimed benefits--which the Court accepted in 2003--minimal at best. (Contains 28 footnotes.)
title Against "Diversity"
topic Evidence
Affirmative Action
Educational Benefits
Court Litigation
Reverse Discrimination
Equal Education
Selective Admission
Admission Criteria
College Admission
Student Diversity
Etiology
Administrative Principles
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ984446