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Search resuls for: "National Association of Law"


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Any day now the Supreme Court will decide two cases that will determine the future of affirmative action — one involving race-conscious admissions at the University of North Carolina and a companion case involving Harvard. Although debates around affirmative action have typically focused on people of color, the policy has also applied to gender, and women have been among affirmative action’s greatest beneficiaries. Now, after decades of allowing these programs in college admissions, the Supreme Court appears poised to weaken or dismantle efforts to make higher education more available to members of historically underrepresented minority groups. If the Supreme Court overturns or neuters this well-settled law, every one of us who proudly bore the title “the first woman” must work to ensure underrepresented communities maintain access to elite educational institutions. Opponents of affirmative action suggest that it is no longer needed because the United States has reached the stage where everyone is treated equally.
Persons: Organizations: University of North, Harvard, U.S, Southern, of, National Association of Law Locations: University of North Carolina, of New York, United States
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