Affirmative Action: Social Justice Or Reverse Discrimination?Francis Beckwith, Todd E. Jones Prometheus Books, 1997 - 250 páginas What is our goal: equal opportunity or equality of result? The debate rages on. The November 5, 1996 decision by voters in California to eliminate most forms of state sanctioned affirmative action ignited a civil rights debate that sent shock waves across the country. The vote had critics celebrating the dawn of a new era of equal rights, while opponents warned of school and workplace discrimination without the protective blanket of affirmative action. The question of racial equality has inspired new debate today, reminiscent of the conflicts of the 1960s. Again we ask ourselves: Is affirmative action necessary to maintain equal labor practices, school desegregation plans, and broad social standards of racial equality? Does affirmative action or laws to roll it back go against the idea of equality itself? Should race play an important role in college admissions and corporate hiring? Is affirmative action a poison instead of a cure? For some, it depends on how the term is defined. These and other questions are debated in this highly charged collection of essays by a distinguished group of politicians, philosophers, educators, and others including Tom Beauchamp, Ward Connerly, Ronald Dworkin, Stanley Fish, Lyndon Johnson, Nicholas LeMann, Louis Pojman, George Sher, Thomas Sowell, Shelby Steele, Judith Jarvis Thomson, Richard Wasserstrom, Cornell West, and Steven Yates. Included also are important legal decisions bearing on affirmative action. |
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Página 45
... law school under a court order . The Washington State Supreme Court reversed the decision and ordered him out . DeFunis appealed to the United States Supreme Court , which stayed the lower - court decision , permitting him to remain ...
... law school under a court order . The Washington State Supreme Court reversed the decision and ordered him out . DeFunis appealed to the United States Supreme Court , which stayed the lower - court decision , permitting him to remain ...
Página 70
... LAW SCHOOL Ronald Dworkin I In 1945 a black man named Sweatt applied to the University of Texas Law School , but was refused admission because state law provided that only whites could attend . The Supreme Court de- clared that this law ...
... LAW SCHOOL Ronald Dworkin I In 1945 a black man named Sweatt applied to the University of Texas Law School , but was refused admission because state law provided that only whites could attend . The Supreme Court de- clared that this law ...
Página 72
... law school after one lower court had decided in his favor , and the law school said that he would be allowed to graduate however the case was finally decided . The Court there- fore held that the case was moot and dismissed the appeal ...
... law school after one lower court had decided in his favor , and the law school said that he would be allowed to graduate however the case was finally decided . The Court there- fore held that the case was moot and dismissed the appeal ...
Contenido
What Is Affirmative Action | 9 |
Introduction to Part I | 21 |
Taking Affirmative Action Apart | 34 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 16 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
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