Two views: Affirmative action

Supreme Court case on tap

Moderated by Tom Sabulis

There may be health care-like interest in the U.S. Supreme Court when it convenes in October to hear the case of a spurned college student who’s challenging race-based admissions at the University of Texas. In today’s commentary, leaders at Emory and Syracuse universities argue that schools need to consider the whole person and not forsake the education of an increasingly diverse work pool. A Mercer law professor writes that the next step toward constitutional color-blindness will be cause for celebration.

Commenting is open below.

By Earl Lewis and Nancy Cantor

The Supreme Court has agreed to hear yet another and strikingly similar case about affirmative action at a flagship public university (Fisher v. University of Texas) and many of us are having a Yogi Berra moment.

It’s déjà vu, all over again, considering the compelling interest of not leaving behind a growing proportion of the nation’s talent pool, particularly as we try to play catch up in science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

If you read the appellate decision in the Fisher case, it is clear that the lower court believes the University of Texas has met the standard established by the Supreme Court in Grutter v. Bollinger. Why then take this case other than to rule race an impermissible component of the diversity matrix?

For a long time universities have been told to review the entire person. Yet if narrow tailoring comes to mean excluding ethnic background, gender or race, colleges and universities will find ourselves in a curious social position.

Think of it, race is noted when you are born; it is registered when you die. Race is observed in close human interactions; its characteristics are collected by the state for a range of reasons. It could be that the only time race won’t be considered is when an admissions counselor makes a decision about how to shape a given college class. Is that in the nation’s interest as we attempt to compete on the world’s stage, where we need to tap the full range of human talent in the United States?

As history repeats itself, the stakes couldn’t be higher. In 2003, a distinguished group of retired military generals filed an amicus brief in Grutter v. Bollinger that those of us working on the case believe awakened the Court’s majority, and much of the nation, to the compelling national security interest of diversity.

Drawing on the lessons of Vietnam, in which a primarily white leadership attempted to lead an enlisted force largely composed of soldiers of color, the generals underlined with the court the importance of affirmative action to ensure a military leadership with legitimacy in the eyes of its troops. This was particularly compelling against the backdrop of a nation, less than two years after 9/11, deeply drained by old wars in Iraq and new engagements in Afghanistan and fearful of global terrorism.

Nearly a decade later, we are still a country drained by war and fearful of global competition. Only now we add economic war to the list as well as the social divisions and disparities it portends. We cannot lead in a global-knowledge economy, one largely driven by entrepreneurship and innovation in science and technology, without full participation of the increasingly diverse next generation of talent. We are losing the talent war by leaps and bounds; diversity means better science, more innovation, and healthier communities.

From our experiences, in Syracuse, N.Y., a prototypical rust-belt city, and in Atlanta, the citadel of the modern civil rights movement, there is no luxury to this argument – we simply can’t win the war for the social and economic health of our communities without this full participation. And make no mistake, we are in the midst of that war.

Even with affirmative action, the road forward is full of land mines. Pervasive zero-sum thinking divides and distracts us, pitting groups against groups, as we see in the inflamed rhetoric over immigration and The Dream Act. This comes at the time when we most need a collective 21st century barn-raising to turn around our failing schools and send our full talent pool on to college.

Higher education has a task in educating that diversity of talent, and must do it without assuming that those who for generations have lived in relative isolation from one another beyond our campuses will automatically cohere into a vibrant whole once invited onto our campuses. When we structure direct intergroup experiences, they do translate into sustained increases in civic agency, civic mindedness and mutual understanding that matter to prosperity going forward.

Private and public colleges and universities are partnering with our communities and we can’t legitimately do that if we are not as diverse as our neighbors. Leveraging diversity for democracy does work, so it is time that we work at it.

Earl Lewis is provost at Emory University. Nancy Cantor is chancellor of Syracuse University.

By David G. Oedel

The most-anticipated case of the Supreme Court’s next term is Abigail Fisher’s challenge to the racial preference system at the University of Texas. Fisher is a white college student who was denied admission to UT in 2008.

Before the Supreme Court ruled in 2003 in another prominent affirmative action case, Grutter v. Bollinger, UT had been effectively promoting diversity by automatically admitting the top 10 percent of Texas high school students – without explicitly considering race.

Then came Grutter in 2003, in which the Supreme Court allowed Michigan’s law school to use racial factors in admissions. Justice Sandra Day O’Connor for the court in Grutter warned that any need for racial consciousness in admissions was already waning. Nonetheless, UT later used the Grutter decision to add explicit racial considerations to supplement UT’s top-10-percent admissions system.

In the Supreme Court case coming up next term, Fisher is challenging the denial of her admission to UT. Fisher claims that other applicants to UT, on explicit racial diversity grounds, were admitted with credentials less than hers. Fisher must hope for a different result from the one Grutter got to her similar complaint back in 2003.

It’s not a long-shot for Fisher. The world is moving. Young people entering colleges are already more accepting of diversity than their older cohorts. The 2012 Pew poll on American values shows that 95 percent of young adults now approve of interracial dating, and that people younger than 50 have more accepting views of immigrants than do people 50 and older. Testing another measure of diversity consciousness, the Public Religion Research Institute in 2011 found that young adults approve of gay marriage by 20 percentage points more than older adults. The young have more personal peer experience of diversity.

According to the 2010 census, 80 percent of seniors are white, compared with only 54 percent of children. As diversity is more pervasive in general society, so the burden on educational institutions to promote diversity is lightened.

The legal world is changing too. In the Parents Involved case of 2007, Chief Justice John Roberts and Samuel Alito expressed significant skepticism about any use of racial factors, while limiting use of race in voluntary integration of charter schools. “The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race,” Roberts wrote.

In the Fisher case, the court has many options. It could hold that diversity, though a compelling purpose, can be achieved effectively enough through non-racially-explicit means, such as the top-10-percent admissions program that is already in place at UT. The court could also rule that UT failed to comply with Grutter’s approach by adopting admissions targets akin to quotas. The court could overrule Grutter and end explicit affirmative action in higher education altogether. Or, of course, Fisher could lose her case, as she has already lost in the courts below.

On its face, Grutter was a temporary license to continue the offense that is suffered when any public official legally, explicitly considers any person’s race as a ground for official action. Justice O’Connor in Grutter warned that affirmative action might no longer be constitutionally defensible in 25 years. She may have over-estimated that time period, just as she might, in 2003, have over-estimated the time until the election of the first African-American president.

Ever since Justice John Marshall Harlan dissented in Plessy v. Ferguson, the notorious 1896 case that endorsed “separate but equal” and Jim Crow, we have been waiting for the promise of a truly color-blind constitution. Whether or not Abigail Fisher’s case will mark that event, the eventual arrival of constitutional color-blindness will be a cause for celebration, not despair.

David G. Oedel is a professor at Mercer University School of Law.

22 comments Add your comment

Grob Hahn

August 10th, 2012
7:40 am

When does it end? Or does it ever? Are white Americas forever to be blamed and penalized forever for historic issues they didn’t cause? Yes, modern day white people have not done anything to you, yet they are blamed for everything simply because of their skin color? What sense does this make? If you’re not good enough for a college seat, it’s YOUR problem. A program that lets you in anyway doesn’t help anyone in the long run. Like it or not, some people fail no matter what color they are!
Grobbbbbbbbbbb

Krystal'sBalls

August 10th, 2012
7:21 am

When will the LIES end SWB?

Affirmative Action was a direct result of White America systematically and “legally” ensure that there was NO field to “compete” on WHATSOEVER when it came to Blacks in this country. Know why there were HBCUs and school segregation in the first place? Whites didn’t believe Blacks should be educated and thus would not allow them in “their” schools. As it relates to finance, it is revealed still to this day that Blacks are discriminated against when meeting the SAME requirements as their White counterparts. I know many Whites who still benefit from the privileges of inner systems in gaining their opportunities when there are Blacks much more qualified educationally and professionally. But when the majority of things in this country are controlled by Whites, it’s not difficult to see how it can be fought or even debated without the distorted view of the true “beneficiary”. By the way, you might want to know that the biggest beneficiary of AA always has been and continues to be, White women. That is not intended to be a strike at White women, just making the fact known. That is just the truth. Deal with it how you may. You all must abandon this mentality that Black people only attain and maintain opportunities because of some AA “handout”. I have always “run circles” around many of my White counterparts. The issues will never be resolved because the privileged refuse the deal with the issues on an HONEST level.

seabeau

August 10th, 2012
6:19 am

Diverslty is cultural destruction.! Look at empires of the past,as long as they were ethnocentric they were strong. When they became diverse they declined and were absorbed by others!! Can you say Balkinization!!

SAWB

August 10th, 2012
12:12 am

Wow, the vitriol from many of the post here makes it pretty obvious why it is so difficult to move past issues of race. Affirmative action is a practice which rightly or wrongly labels people as incapably of competing on a level field. However, past experiences tell us that large portions of the population are not competing on a level field and the situations they find themselves in are often not of their own making. So, it does seem that some process for looking at the entire person is appropriate.

However, when we say we are looking at the entire person we need to assure that we are indeed doing that and not just considering one characteristic such as race. For instance why should an African American young man from an affluent family receive any special consideration while a white woman from a low income single parent home receives none? In this day of advanced analytical programming we should be able to develop a process for considering all the various attributes that contribute to a student’s readiness to compete.

Small-Business Owner

August 9th, 2012
11:50 pm

Affirmative-Action Sucks.

nelson

August 9th, 2012
9:38 pm

Syracuse is the prototypical rust belt city?Does that mean that it at one time was a thriving up and coming city and now is on a down hill slide. That is absolutely preposterous. Let me say this, the 6th largest mall in the U.S. is just opening in Syracuse[Destiny USA], bigger than anything in Atlanta and The Syracuse U. Basketball team,no team in Georgia has beaten them in 50 years. And racial equality has been around so long it is a non issue. Lastly it is an easy 20 minute commute from 90% of the suburbs. There is no need for affirmative action in Syracuse, and lastly, NewYork is the home of the first and foremost of all deep water ports[NYC].

KrystalsBalls

August 9th, 2012
9:35 pm

Hey @JamalJenkins you stupid P.O.S.

You might want to educate yourself before you pop off witn all that BS. Ever looked at your or your daddy’s back and arms lately? Shave all that hair off of it and see what you see- PINK SKIN, JUST LIKE AN APE!

When is the last time you looked at your lips? THIN AS H3LL, JUST LIKE AN APE! You see there is no hatred like White self hatred. You hate yourself so much because you cannot bring yourself to accept the FACT that you came from BLACK. Do you know anything about genetics? You cannot get a Black person from a White person. This is why you racist MFs are in such a tizzy and paranoid about “preserving the ‘White’ race”. You hate yourself and hate people of color because you cannot figure out how in the h3££ they continue to survive in the face of your never ending attempts to destroy them? It’s because Black people are the ORIGINAL PEOPLE. The White European has been selling the world BS from the beginning of recorded history, STARTING WITH the BS “Jesus Christ” story and “bible”. Newsflash, there is no blond-haired blue eyed “God” with the name “Jesus” that was born and roamed in what is NORTH AFRICA MFr! There IS a God however, an ALMIGHTY ONE. He is revealing all in His time, and exposing the true evil of the world for ALL to see. You and your sickness will NOT have any victory in your fruitless efforts. Believe THAT!

Bernie

August 9th, 2012
8:01 pm

If we lived in a Utopian world, Race would not be an issue. However, since the arrival of the cargo on ” THE GOOD SHIP JESUS” this was destined to be an issue of concern for America for years to come. The whole idea of Affirmative Action from an African American perspective was to assist and provide a way socially and economically for an oppressed RACE of people based on skin color alone in gaining access to the American Dream.

Just as many Whites resented this decision. There were many of the Africans on board that fateful ship’s arrival in America in 1562 resented their entire LIVES and their FAMILIES LIVES, Men,Women & Children being STOLEN FOREVER!

The entire ENSLAVEMENT and BONDAGE of a RACE of people were held in absolute inhumane conditions and were not even considered HUMAN! has not been repeated by any civilized NATION since, and that ENSLAVEMENT lasted well over 100 years.

Millions of their descendants is what we are left with today. The question arises, how do we incorporate these now citizens into a Nation SUPPOSEDLY built on the pillars of FREEDOM & LIBERTY.

IF, we are a NATION that TRULY believes in such WORDS, why is it that the issue of incorporating these descendants into MAINSTREAM AMERICA has caused such
an uproar among the descendants of its SLAVE OWNERS and other many immigrant groups who arrived years later FREELY and VOLUNTARILY ?

These are the questions that the world has asked of AMERICA since the establishment and the DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE in 1776 and the creation of that most cherished document named THE U.S. CONSTITUTION.

We sing with GREAT NATIONAL PRIDE, when the NATIONAL ANTHEM is sung or played. We STAND ERECT at attention with a solemn oath at the saying of THE PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE. We are moved to TEARS, just at seeing the BARS and
STRIPES wave ever so beautiful in the morning and evening sun.

African Americans as a race of people have always wondered and questioned if ALL
of those wonder acts of NATIONAL PRIDE, a REAL BELIEF OF A NATION OF PEOPLE or just mere WORDS that Sound PRETTY?

The issue of AFFIRMATIVE ACTION sounds a echo chamber to the conscious of a
NATION to either put in to action, ALL of those BEAUTIFUL and AMAZING WORDS that WE ALL say…. “There are NONE LIKE OURS”.

HOW DO WE AS A NATION RIGHT such a WRONG?

As in any Human decision the INTENT was GOOD and NOBLE. Its outcome has been less than PERFECT.

Years ago, this Great NATION fought each other, BROTHER against BROTHER and the casualties caused have not been matched or exceeded since. As WE look into the ABYSS knowing ALL of these things, we as a people who “CLAIM” AMERICA is THE GREATEST NATION IN THE WORLD and WE are a GOD FEARING PEOPLE And The DEFENDERS of TYRANNY and INJUSTICE, what do we DO?

IF, WE are unable to put those GREAT WORDS,SAYINGS and ACTS Into ACTION and DEED….what does it SAY to OUR CHILDREN and THE CHILDREN to come about what OUR WORDS TRULY MEAN?…………This is the real question to be ANSWERED and WE are waiting STILL?

Sadly, As many of us look around today, these same questions still resonate in our Hearts and MIND…what will become of us a Nation?, a PEOPLE? are these just mere WORDS of a proud egotistical people or is it a BELIEF of a people based on the foundation of FREEDOM and LIBERTY for ALL.

Jack

August 9th, 2012
6:57 pm

Race based adminssions don’t serve the best and brightest: This practice is robbing our industries of the talent so sorely needed.

Chris Sanchez

August 9th, 2012
6:17 pm

So basically Dr.s Lewis and Cantor support discrimination. It would seem Dr. King’s dream of a nation where people will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character has no place in their ideology. What a pity!