Affirmative Action

Affirmative Action

John W. Johnson, University of Northern Iowa
Robert P. Green

Series: Historical Guides to Controversial Issues in America

Description

Affirmative Action recounts the fascinating history of a civil rights provision considered vital to protecting and promoting equality, but still bitterly contested in the courts, and in the court of public opinion. The notion of affording special consideration to racial minorities and/or women in employment, government contracting, and education has divided once-unified coalitions, affected elections at the state and federal levels, sparked angry popular referenda, and occasioned major Supreme Court decisions. Today, more than 40 years after the birth of affirmative action, strident voices on all sides of the debate continue to clamor for a hearing. "Special consideration" or "reverse discrimination"? This examination traces the genesis and development of affirmative action and the continuing controversy that constitutes the story of racial and gender preferences. It pays attention to the individuals, the events, and the ideas that spawned federal and selected state affirmative action policies, and the resistance to those policies. Perhaps most important, it probes the key legal challenges to affirmative action in the nation's courts. The controversy over affirmative action in America has been marked by a persistent tension between its advocates, who emphasize the necessity of overcoming historical patterns of racial and gender injustice, and its critics, who insist on the integrity of color and gender blindness. In the wake of related U.S. Supreme Court decisions of 2007, this volume brings the story of one of the most embattled public policy issues of the last half century up to date, demonstrating that social justice cannot simply be legislated into existence, nor can voices on either side of the debate be ignored. -- Provided by publisher