AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

The diversity lie.(in college admissions)

Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy

| September 22, 2003 | Fitzpatrick, Brian T. | COPYRIGHT 2003 Harvard Society for Law and Public Policy, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Last Term, the Supreme Court considered the racial preference plans used by the University of Michigan's undergraduate and law schools. (1) In its opinions upholding the law school program and striking down the undergraduate program, it resolved a fierce debate that had occupied this country for an entire generation: Are the educational benefits of a diverse student body so important that they constitute a compelling governmental interest? The Supreme Court ruled affirmatively. (2) Accordingly, the Court held that, so long as its admission's office is careful about how it does so, a university is free to discriminate on the basis of race in order to maintain racial diversity on campus.

Or did it? The Court acknowledged that its holding was contingent upon one determination that it did not have occasion to consider: whether the University of Michigan was being sincere when it told the Court that the reason it discriminated on the basis of race was to obtain the educational benefits of a diverse student body. As the Court recognized, a governmental interest cannot be compelling if it is not sincere. (3) Because the disappointed applicants who had sued the University had not challenged the University's sincerity in this regard. the Court "presumed" that the University was acting in "good faith." (4) The Court noted, however, that this would not have been the case if there had been "a showing to the contrary." (5)

What follows is a showing to the contrary. It is quite clear that the University of Michigan lied to the Supreme Court when it claimed it discriminates to obtain the educational benefits of diversity, and well near every other elite university lies when they say the same thing. Accordingly, the diversity fight is not over--it has only just begun.

In the Michigan cases, the Court considered two different admissions plans employed by the University. The plan employed by the University's undergraduate school, which ranks applicants on a 150-point scale, awards 20 points to applicants who are black, Hispanic, or Native American; white and Asian applicants get no such points. (By contrast, a perfect SAT score merits only 12 points on the 150-point scale.) The plan employed by the University's law school similarly grants preference to black, Hispanic, and Native American applicants over white and Asian applicants, but does so in a less conspicuous fashion. (6)

Generally, of course, racial discrimination of this sort runs afoul of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which guarantees all citizens "equal protection of the laws." (7) The Supreme Court has, however, decided that not all racial discrimination is illegal. Rather, if a state has a really good reason to discriminate, and if it is careful in how it goes about discriminating, then the state is free to do so. The Supreme Court evaluates the constitutionality of racial discrimination under what it calls the "strict scrutiny" test. In order to pass this test, the state must advance a "compelling interest" that it seeks to serve by racial discrimination, and the discrimination must be "narrowly tailored" to serve that interest. (8) Prior to its opinions in the Michigan cases, the Supreme Court had found this test satisfied on only two occasions. The first was during World War II, when it held that the internment of Japanese-Americans, although racial discrimination, was nonetheless justified by the compelling interest of national security. (9) The second was during the 1980s, when the Court held that the compelling interest of remedying the long history of discrimination against blacks by the Alabama Sheriff's Department justified the use of a 50% black quota in hiring by that department. (10)

The University of Michigan told the Supreme Court that it needed to discriminate on the basis of race, but not for the sake of national security and not to remedy its own prior racial discrimination. Instead, the University told the Supreme Court that it discriminates in order to provide its students with the educational benefits of a diverse student body. In particular, the University claimed that it must discriminate on the basis of race in order to enroll "meaningful numbers" or a "critical mass" of black, Hispanic, and Native American students. (11) The University argued that meaningful representation of these groups yields educational benefits insofar as it increases the number of merchants in the campus marketplace of ideas: If these groups were not included in meaningful numbers on campus, the University says, valuable and unique perspectives would be lost from classrooms, dormitories, and quadrangles. (12) As the law school argued to the Supreme Court, "'classroom discussion is livelier, more spirited, and simply more enlightening and interesting' when the students have 'the greatest possible variety of backgrounds.'" (13) A critical mass of these students serves to "introduce[] students to unfamiliar experiences and perspectives." (14)

The Supreme ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Supreme Court Justices Unknown to Most Americans, Says New Survey.
Press release article from: PR Newswire January 10, 2006 700+ words
...serving on the U.S. Supreme Court included George W...can't name a single Supreme Court justice," says constitutional...professor at Northwestern University Law School. "The...that who sits on the Supreme Court makes a big difference...
Supreme Court to consider ending execution of juveniles.(St. Louis...
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service Branch-Brioso, Karen January 26, 2004 700+ words
...WASHINGTON _ Fifteen years after the Supreme Court said the Constitution doesn't bar...sentenced to death, but the Missouri Supreme Court overturned the sentence in August...when they committed their crimes. The Supreme Court's decision Monday to review the case...
Supreme Court shenanigans. (California Supreme Court decisions)
Magazine article from: Outlook Brown, Kenneth C. March 22, 1991 700+ words
...in the state, the California Supreme Court is charged with reviewing those...generally are as appealing to Supreme Court Justices as homework is to Bart Simpson, and, as a result, the Supreme Court handles very few. This aside...
Supreme Court shift favors employers; Bush appointees make pro-business rulings...
Magazine article from: Business Insurance Jr, Gerald L. Maatman October 1, 2007 700+ words
...Byline: Gerald L. Maatman Jr. The Supreme Court's 2006/2007 term has enhanced expectations...Associate Justice Samuel Alito-the Supreme Court shifted decidedly to the right on workplace...amp; Rubber Co., in which the Supreme Court determined that pay decisions are discrete...
Supreme Court Asked to Admit Inferiority to African Commission.
News wire article from: Asia Africa Intelligence Wire February 8, 2005 700+ words
...Anthony Amazee, has requested the Supreme Court to declare itself incompetent to hear...it. But the Advocate General at the Supreme Court has argued that the African Commission...in Africa. That would mean that the Supreme Court in Cameroon is inferior in jurisdiction...
Supreme Court causes backlogs, not the law.
News wire article from: Asia Africa Intelligence Wire December 23, 2003 700+ words
...problems facing the Indonesian Supreme Court is the backlogs. Though significantly...new. They have been with the Supreme Court for several decades, and nothing much seems to change them. The Supreme Court in the past has tried to overcome...
Supreme Court to consider ending execution of juveniles.
Newspaper article from: St. Louis Post-Dispatch (St. Louis, MO) January 26, 2004 700+ words
...WASHINGTON _ Fifteen years after the Supreme Court said the Constitution doesn't bar...sentenced to death, but the Missouri Supreme Court overturned the sentence in August...when they committed their crimes. The Supreme Court's decision Monday to review the case...
Supreme Court comes up with compromise.
News wire article from: South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) December 4, 2000 700+ words
...for the Florida Supreme Court," said Robert...Nova Southeastern University. "The Florida Supreme Court simply has to issue...since the Florida Supreme Court's decision has...professor at American University's law school...
Supreme Court comes up with compromise.(South Florida Sun-Sentinel)
News wire article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service Lorente, Rafael Somers, Terri December 4, 2000 700+ words
...for the Florida Supreme Court," said Robert...Nova Southeastern University. "The Florida Supreme Court simply has to issue...since the Florida Supreme Court's decision has...professor at American University's law school...
'Supreme Court up to Gus Dur'.
Newspaper article from: Jakarta Post January 5, 2001 700+ words
...candidates for the Supreme Court Chief and returned...candidates for the Supreme Court's top post. The...the state Padjadjaran University in Bandung, West Java...Meanwhile, a senior Supreme Court official said on Thursday...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, The diversity lie.(in college admissions)

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA