4. Affirmative Action's Diversity Dilemma Spells Its Doom UnCommon Law
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- Society & Culture
It’s been almost 20 years since Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, intentionally or not, set an affirmative action countdown in motion. On Oct. 31, the Supreme Court heard arguments that Harvard and the University of North Carolina go too far in their use of race in admissions. Will the diversity rationale — the heart of affirmative action defenses since 1978 — convince this staunchly conservative court?
Also, while diversity has been the reason affirmative action has survived legal tests — was it ever the best reason, under the Constitution, for affirmative action? Or have advocates been hamstrung by an argument that doesn't go far enough?
Are race-conscious admissions policies about to fall? The conclusion to our four-part series on affirmative action at the Supreme Court.
Guests:
Edward Blum, president of Students for Fair Admissions
William Lee, partner at WilmerHale
Kimberly Robinson, Supreme Court reporter for Bloomberg Law
Lee Bollinger, president of Columbia University
Ted Shaw, professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law
Michelle Adams, professor at the University of Michigan Law School
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It’s been almost 20 years since Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, intentionally or not, set an affirmative action countdown in motion. On Oct. 31, the Supreme Court heard arguments that Harvard and the University of North Carolina go too far in their use of race in admissions. Will the diversity rationale — the heart of affirmative action defenses since 1978 — convince this staunchly conservative court?
Also, while diversity has been the reason affirmative action has survived legal tests — was it ever the best reason, under the Constitution, for affirmative action? Or have advocates been hamstrung by an argument that doesn't go far enough?
Are race-conscious admissions policies about to fall? The conclusion to our four-part series on affirmative action at the Supreme Court.
Guests:
Edward Blum, president of Students for Fair Admissions
William Lee, partner at WilmerHale
Kimberly Robinson, Supreme Court reporter for Bloomberg Law
Lee Bollinger, president of Columbia University
Ted Shaw, professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law
Michelle Adams, professor at the University of Michigan Law School
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
37 min