What has become known as “affirmative action” is one of
the more contentious aspects of our society.
In order to prevent discrimination in the future one must pass a law to
prohibit it. However, such a law then precludes
providing any means for a minority that was harmed by discrimination to receive
special treatment that would compensate for that prior experience. Courts, schools, businesses, and politicians
have tried to deal with this paradox for generations now. Louis Menand provides an interesting
discussion of this issue in an article for The New Yorker: The Changing Meaning of Affirmative Action (Integration by Parts in the
paper version of the magazine). Menand
leans heavily on the book of Melvin I. Urofsky, The Affirmative Action Puzzle: A Living History from Reconstruction to Today,
for information and data.
The term “affirmative action” was coined by Hobart Taylor
Jr. in assisting the Kennedy administration in forming its Committee on Equal
Employment Opportunity.
“Taylor needed a flexible phrase
because Kennedy’s committee was a bureaucratic entity with a vague mandate
meant to signal the Administration’s commitment to fairness in employment. Its
purview, like the purview of committees dating back to the Administration of
Franklin Roosevelt, was the awarding of federal contracts, and its mandate was
to see that companies the federal government did business with did not
discriminate on the basis of race. The committee had no real enforcement mechanism,
though, so ‘affirmative action’ was intended to communicate to firms that
needed to integrate their workforce something like ‘Don’t just stand there. Do
something.’ What they were supposed to do, aside from not discriminating, was
unspecified.”
“’Do something’ is still one of
the meanings of ‘affirmative action’ today.”
The trick is to provide a distribution of societal
benefits that more closely matches the demographic distribution without
violating the civil rights laws and the Fourteenth Amendment. The chosen means of accomplishing this is by
identifying diversity as a social good.
“Many firms and educational
institutions have affirmative-action or diversity officers. Their job is to
insure not only that hiring and promotion are handled in a color-blind manner but
that good-faith efforts are made to include racial minorities (and sometimes
individuals in other categories, such as women or veterans or disabled persons)
in the hiring pool, and, if they are qualified, to attempt to recruit them. In
this context, ‘affirmative’ means: demonstrate that you did your best to find
and promote members of underrepresented groups. You do not have to give them
preferential treatment.”
Such an approach is subject to complaints about fairness
and presents judges with difficult decisions.
The result is frequent relitigation and judicial rulings that leave
many dissatisfied. College admission has
provided much of the judicial battling. The Bakke case is a good example of the
issues that have arisen and the relevant legal findings.
“The Supreme Court case that
admissions offices rely on today is Regents of the University of California v.
Bakke. It was decided in 1978, and, despite several attempts to relitigate it,
it is still the law of the land. Bakke is a good example of the jurisprudential
confusion around affirmative action: the Court managed to produce six opinions
in that case. The plurality opinion, by Lewis Powell, struck down an admissions
program at the University of California at Davis School of Medicine, from which
Allan Bakke, a white man, had been twice rejected, but it upheld the right of
schools to use race-conscious admissions programs.”
UC Davis had used a separate admissions process to select
minority applicants outside of the normal process. There was a specified number of slots
available for these applicants. This
specification was establishing a “quota” for minorities and judged to be
clearly introducing a bias. However,
Powell called up the First Amendment as a means of providing the option for
racial considerations. Basically, UC
Davis should have the right to determine the learning environment provided at
the university, and if it decided a diverse student body produced an improved
environment, they had the right to proceed accordingly.
“Powell argued, however, that
another right was in play: the First Amendment; specifically, the right of
academic freedom. There is no constitutional right of academic freedom, but
Powell cited a 1957 case, Sweezy v. New Hampshire, in which Felix Frankfurter,
in a concurring opinion, quoted South African jurists to the effect that the
principle of academic freedom allows a university to determine who will teach
its classes and who will sit in its classrooms.”
“Powell concluded that, since
Davis could reasonably decide that a diverse class provides a better learning
environment, considerations of an applicant’s race—as one factor among
others—can fall within the exercise of a constitutionally protected right.
(Under the Court’s ruling, Bakke was admitted to Davis and he became a doctor;
Urofsky says that he went on to work at the Mayo Clinic, where one of his
patients was Lewis Powell.)”
Given that background, there are two questions about
affirmative action that need addressing: did it work (was it fair and
successful), and is it still needed. Urofsky
provides the answer as to whether it worked.
“There is a whole library on
racial inequality and efforts to address it, and “The Affirmative Action
Puzzle” does not offer many novelties. But the book, just by the accumulation
of sixty years’ worth of evidence, allows us to reach some useful conclusions,
and the most important of these is that affirmative action worked. The federal
government, with the backing of the courts, weaponized the 1964 Civil Rights
Act and its legislative progeny—notably the Education Amendments of 1972, home
to the notorious (in the R.B.G. sense) Title IX, banning sex discrimination in
federally assisted educational institutions—and forced businesses to hire women
and racial minorities.”
“And they did. Study after study
suggests that it is just not the case that ‘it would have happened anyway.’ In
1981, for example, as Urofsky tells us, the Reagan Labor Department commissioned
a report on gains in hiring among African-Americans and women. It found that
between 1974 and 1980 the rate of minority employment in businesses that
contracted with the federal government, and were therefore susceptible to being
squeezed, rose by twenty per cent, and the rate of employment of women rose by
15.2 per cent. In companies that did not contract with the government, the
rates were twelve per cent and 2.2 per cent, respectively.”
“This was so contrary to
everything that Reagan had been saying about affirmative action that the Labor
Department hired an outside consulting firm to vet its own report. When the
firm returned with the news that the methods and the conclusions were valid,
the Administration did the only thing it could do. It refused to release the
report, thus allowing politicians to go on telling the public that affirmative
action didn’t work.”
Menand then produced this surprising declaration.
“…the biggest defenders of
affirmative action are not the N.A.A.C.P. and the Democratic National
Committee. The biggest defenders are corporations and the military.”
By not having a diverse set of employees to deal with a
diverse marketplace, a business can place itself at a disadvantage with respect
to minority customers. A white-male
hiring policy would eliminate about two-thirds of the population as potential
employees. That makes no sense
talentwise. The nation cannot have a
stable, dependable military force heavy in minority enlisted soldiers if it is
led by a white-male officer corps. In
2003, another admissions case involving the University of Michigan reached the
Supreme Court.
“The extent of the corporate
buy-in was put on dramatic display in 2003, when the Supreme Court heard
Grutter v. Bollinger, another admissions case, this one involving the
University of Michigan Law School. The Court received sixty-nine amicus briefs
(a lot) arguing in favor of Michigan’s affirmative-action admissions program,
and among the amici were General Motors, Dow Chemical, and Intel, along with
the largest federation of unions in the United States, the A.F.L.-C.I.O. They
supported affirmative-action admissions because they wanted universities to
produce educated people for a diversified workforce.”
“The Court also received, in
Grutter, what became known as ‘the military brief.’ This was an amicus brief
signed by big-name generals like Norman Schwarzkopf, Wesley Clark, and John
Shalikashvili; by a former Defense Secretary, William Cohen; and by former
superintendents of the service academies, all of which, of course, are
government agencies. ‘At present,’ they told the Court, ‘the military cannot
achieve an officer corps that is both highly qualified and racially
diverse unless the service academies and the ROTC use limited race-conscious
recruiting and admissions policies.’ They were saying that if the Court ruled
against Michigan it would be upending efforts, up to that point highly
successful, to maintain a diverse officer corps.”
Affirmative action produced benefits to the recipients,
to schools, to businesses, and to the military, but was it fair in the sense
that worthy people were excluded from an opportunity they deserved? It should be recognized that in school
admissions, the number of lesser qualified whites who were admitted in place of
the litigant arguing against affirmative action was probably much larger than
the number of minority applicants in question.
Menand provides this perspective.
“Did white men suffer as a
result of affirmative action? That turns out to be a difficult question to
answer. ‘There is very little hard evidence to prove that a minority hire
almost always took place at the expense of a better-qualified white person,’
Urofsky says. He also tells us that there are ‘no reliable data’ on whether men
were shut out of jobs that were offered to women.”
“Urofsky’s view is that, over
all, white men did not go without jobs or the chance to attend college. Turned
down by one place, they went someplace else. The number who were ‘victimized’
by affirmative action, he says, is ‘minuscule.’ Certainly this is true in the
case of college admissions. Most colleges accept almost everyone who applies,
so when we talk about race-conscious admissions we are talking about policies
that affect a relatively small number of people. Urofsky borrows from Thomas
Kane, of the Brookings Institution, an analogy to handicapped parking spaces: a
driver looking to park who does not have a permit might feel ‘excluded’ driving
past an empty handicapped spot, but he or she usually finds a place to park.”
Finally, is affirmative action still needed? The process involves all groups who might be
discriminated against, but it was put in place in an attempt to ameliorate the
centuries of harm done to black people by slavery, Jim Crow, and
institutionalized racial bias. Numerous
inequalities continue to exist indicating that blacks are still a heavily
disadvantaged minority. There is much
work yet to be done.
The Grutter admissions case, even with all the support for
affirmative action coming from so many directions, was decided by a 5-4
vote. The Court is becoming increasingly
more conservative and has shown the willingness to eliminate long-standing protections
using the argument that they are no longer needed, as with voting rights
protections in Shelby v. Holder. Menand
fears that such a future awaits affirmative action.
“The Court’s decision in Shelby
v. Holder vacating a central provision of the Voting Rights Act has backfired.
It turns out that, when you remove enforcement mechanisms and remedial
oversight, things tend to revert to the status quo ante.”
“The whole history of
affirmative action shows, as Urofsky somewhat reluctantly admits, that when the
programs are shut down minority representation drops. Diversity, however we
define it, is politically constructed and politically maintained. It doesn’t
just happen. It’s a choice we make as a society.”
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