由买买提看人间百态

boards

本页内容为未名空间相应帖子的节选和存档,一周内的贴子最多显示50字,超过一周显示500字 访问原贴
SanFrancisco版 - California's affirmative action ban bolstered by Supreme Court ruling
相关主题
Prop. 8: Supreme Court clears way for gay marriage in California被疑是中国间谍 美国华裔博士生活一团糟[zt] (转载)
California Supreme Court upholds Prop. 209 affirmative action ban重磅炸弹:UC 录取和入学数据分析
Supreme Court upholds Arizona illegal-worker law不能争取政治平等,就别怪外嫁
Supreme Court upholds most of ObamaCare关于Black Latino 学生的drop off rate数据
最高法院就UM的判决宣判了SCA5死刑mercury news 的文章--脑残的ABC又给民主党做打手来了
Gay couple 作为(领养小孩)的父母有啥不同Latino Population In California To Surpass Non-Hispanic Whites In March
致在美华人,和所有为人父母者的一封公开信stop whining, 锁男/女该教小孩说latino语言了
Poll: Latino Vote Devastated GOP Even Worse Than Exits Showed4.2% Social Security Tax for 2011
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: california话题: michigan话题: court话题: supreme话题: ruling
进入SanFrancisco版参与讨论
1 (共1页)
l**t
发帖数: 10440
1
看看左派怎么想的 :-)
http://www.mercurynews.com/education/ci_25617295/californias-af
California's 16-year-old affirmative action ban is lodged more firmly than
ever in state law after the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday shut off further
court challenges in states that have enacted such bans.
By upholding a Michigan law nearly identical to California's, the ruling
left only a legislative -- or ballot initiative -- route for allowing racial
and gender preferences in public college admissions, contracts and hiring.
But those paths, too, are now littered with obstacles, as Democratic
lawmakers discovered when a backlash from Chinese-American families last
month scuttled legislation to let voters again consider the issue.
"I'm a very happy camper," said Ward Connerly, a former UC regent and
architect of the California and Michigan laws.
Despite the setbacks, proponents of affirmative action say they're going to
keep working toward giving minorities a boost in schools and jobs, and the
author of California's most recent ill-fated legislation to overturn the
state's ban says he hasn't given up.
"Yes, I'm going to hopefully bring it back," said Sen. Ed Hernandez, D-West
Covina, who wrote -- and then was forced to withdraw -- Constitutional
Amendment 5. "Quite a few colleagues have been very outspoken and said they
want me to move forward."
The court ruling didn't dampen the hopes of UC Berkeley junior Destiny
Iwuoma, a student government leader and affirmative action activist.
"Students are still fighting for this," he said.
But the Michigan case had major implications for California, where
Proposition 209 -- approved by voters in 1996 -- has forbidden consideration
of race and gender in university admissions and financial aid, contracting
and other public programs throughout the state. Legal challenges to
Proposition 209 failed, and its critics considered the Supreme Court case
out of Michigan the last, best chance to revive a challenge in the courts.
Some say the ruling, combined with the political backlash in California,
could end the debate.
"Prop. 209 is here to stay, and I don't think we're going to hear a lot
about reforming it in the near future," predicted Terry Christensen, a
political-science professor emeritus at San Jose State.
Asian-Americans voted against California's ban in 1996, but restoring race-
conscious admissions in the increasingly competitive UC system struck a
nerve with Chinese-Americans worried it would affect their children, who now
have the highest admission rates.
Arguing that bans such as Michigan's particularly damage states with diverse
populations, California, five other states and the District of Columbia
joined civil rights groups in asking the Supreme Court to invalidate
Michigan's Proposal 2, enacted in 2006. The University of California also
opposed the law in the high court, noting that Prop. 209 dramatically
reduced the admission rates for Latino, black and Native American students.
At Cal, the freshman admission rates for those three groups plunged by more
than 50 percent between 1997 and 1998, the year the ban took effect -- from
45 percent to 20 percent. The proportion of black freshmen fell by half, to
3.4 percent of the class.
The Supreme Court, although splintered in its legal reasoning, determined
that voters had a right to enact Michigan's law in 2006 and to choose to
outlaw race and gender preferences. The majority decision, written by
Justice Anthony Kennedy, was based on a states' rights argument, steering
clear of whether Michigan's law violated the constitutional rights of
minorities there.
"This case is not about the constitutionality, or the merits, of race-
conscious admissions policies in higher education," Kennedy wrote.
The Michigan case was the latest to test the U.S. Supreme Court's evolving
stance on affirmative action, dating back to its 2003 ruling upholding a
narrowly crafted program allowing the consideration of race and gender at
the University of Michigan's law school. The Supreme Court last year ordered
the lower courts to take another look at the University of Texas'
affirmative action guidelines, establishing tougher standards for permitting
race and gender preferences in a public program.
In Tuesday's ruling, Justice Stephen Breyer agreed only with the result,
while Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas would have gone further,
saying Michigan's approach to affirmative action is constitutional. Justices
Sonia Sotomayor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg dissented. Justice Elena Kagan did
not participate in the case.
Legal experts had predicted that the conservative Supreme Court was likely
to leave intact laws such as Michigan's and California's. They also point to
the latest admissions numbers from the statewide University of California,
which show Latinos gaining ground. The largest ethnic group in UC's in-state
applicant pool, Latinos made up nearly 29 percent of admitted students this
year, the second largest group after Asian-Americans, who made up 36
percent. The proportion of white students dropped slightly to just under 27
percent.
Reacting to the ruling Tuesday, Senate Republican Leader Bob Huff, R-Diamond
Bar, said in a news release, recent news shows "that Latinos are faring
well under" Proposition 209.
But Latinos make up nearly half of California's public high school graduates
and are still greatly underrepresented at UC, said Carlos Muñoz, Jr.,
an ethnic studies professor emeritus at UC Berkeley.
Muñoz looks to more work against Prop. 209 ahead. "I believe that it's
a long struggle, but eventually it will have to be overturned."
Howard Mintz covers legal affairs. Contact him at 408-286-0236 or follow him
at Twitter.com/hmintz. Follow Katy Murphy at Twitter.com/katymurphy.
1 (共1页)
进入SanFrancisco版参与讨论
相关主题
4.2% Social Security Tax for 2011最高法院就UM的判决宣判了SCA5死刑
一篇让我等硅工郁闷的文章Gay couple 作为(领养小孩)的父母有啥不同
Re: Split In Half: Tesla Crash Bolsters Safety Claims (转载)致在美华人,和所有为人父母者的一封公开信
纽约时报的反AA时评:Is Harvard Unfair to Asian-Americans?Poll: Latino Vote Devastated GOP Even Worse Than Exits Showed
Prop. 8: Supreme Court clears way for gay marriage in California被疑是中国间谍 美国华裔博士生活一团糟[zt] (转载)
California Supreme Court upholds Prop. 209 affirmative action ban重磅炸弹:UC 录取和入学数据分析
Supreme Court upholds Arizona illegal-worker law不能争取政治平等,就别怪外嫁
Supreme Court upholds most of ObamaCare关于Black Latino 学生的drop off rate数据
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: california话题: michigan话题: court话题: supreme话题: ruling