Harvard Conference to Present First Evidence of the Consequences of
Ending Affirmative Action
Researchers associated with the Harvard Civil Rights Project will present
the first examinations of the consequences of changing from racially-targeted
to non-racial standards at a conference on April 11, 1997. In papers commissioned
for the conference, researchers examined the consequences of using test
scores for admission to the top 20 percent of the nation's colleges,
the impact of California's new "color-blind" polices
on university applications and enrollment, and the first year effects
of the 1996 Hopwood v. Texas decision, which ended affirmative action.
The conference will meet at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and
is supported by grants from the Mellon and MacArthur Foundations.
The Harvard conference, "Non-Racial Standards and Minority Opportunity"
is the first to examine effect of recent court decisions restricting affirmative
action on higher education. In Hopwood, the appellate court held that
schools could no longer use race or ethnicity as factors in admissions
in Texas, Mississippi, and Louisiana. A U.S. court of appeals recently
upheld California's Proposition 209, a statewide referendum which
forbids special consideration for women or minority group members in jobs,
government contracts, or university admission. In addition to the research
findings, the conference will examine attempts to devise non-racial standards,
and the legal framework of racially-targeted policies. It will be attended
by university administrators who oversee admissions, academics, and student
affairs, civil rights and legal experts, as well as researchers. Reporters
who would like to attend should call either Ariadne Valsamis at (617)
496-1895 or Karen Case at (617) 495-3016.
The Harvard Civil Rights Project is a collaboration of researchers from
the Harvard Law School, the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and
other organizations dedicated to exploring the link between law, research,
and policy on civil rights. The Project is co-directed by Christopher
Edley, Jr. Professor of Law, and Gary Orfield, Professor of Education
and Social Policy.
For More Information
Contact Ariadne Valsamis at 617-496-1895