The Volokh Conspiracy
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Racial Classification in Higher Education Admissions Before and After SFFA
This is my new article, forthcoming in the SMU Law Review. Larry Solum's legal blog says its "highly recommended," and you can download it here.
Meanwhile, here is the abstract:
Hundreds of law review articles have discussed the legality of affirmative action programs. Virtually all of them begin with the implicit assumption that the racial classifications used in these programs are legitimate and uncontroversial (an assumption I challenge in my 2022 book, Classified: The Untold Story of Racial Classifications In America). That assumption has been undermined by Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College ("SFFA").
Chief Justice Roberts, writing for a 6-3 majority, asserted that the underlying classifications are "imprecise in many ways" and "opaque." He quoted Justice Gorsuch's concurring opinion, which criticized the classifications for relying on "incoherent" and "irrational" stereotypes. Using these classifications in admissions decisions, Roberts concluded, is inherently illegal because they are so arbitrary that using them could not be a narrowly tailored means to serve the universities' asserted compelling interest in educational diversity.
This Article focuses on the evolution of, and judicial reaction to, racial classifications in cases involving university affirmative action programs. The classifications themselves initially included preferences African Americans plus an idiosyncratic collection of other groups. For example, in the DeFunis case, preferences were given to Mexican Americans and Filipinos, but not to other Hispanic or Asian Americans. By the early 2000s, however, all universities were using the racial and ethnic classifications established by the federal government in Statistical Directive No. 15.
Meanwhile, while lower courts sometimes raised important issues with regard to the scope and definition of the classifications used by universities, this issue played only a tangential role in relevant Supreme Court decisions until SFFA. Following SFFA, institutions seeking to classify people by race and ethnicity are going to need to show a much closer match between the classifications and the "compelling" interests they are pursuing than they needed to before SFFA, and will not be able to rely on broad classifications as "Asian American" or "Hispanic" combine people of wildly varied physiognomies, national origins, and cultural backgrounds.
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I suppose Statistical Directive No. 15 finds itself with the social cost of carbon in the class of highly important policy decisions that are insulated from direct judicial review because they are not regulations.
If it was insulated from judicial review, could you explain what exactly the Supreme Court did in SFFA? Didn’t it review it?
With limited exceptions like currency, no document gets “direct” judicial review. You can’t sue a document (with limited exceptions). You can only sue an individual or legal entity, and the document is relevant only insofar as it affects defendant’s actions. That’s true of statutes. No enforcement, no judicial review. It’s true of regulations. Why shouldn’t it also be true of supporting documents?
If a government rule says "schools accepting federal funds must enroll at least 10% midget lesbian shot-putters" somebody can sue over that rule. What we have here is a document that does not formally set quotas but encourages people to create certain types of quotas.
Another comparison is the EPA report on secondhand smoke published in 1992 or 1993. While the report itself seems to have been a pseudoscientific fraud, an appeals court ruled it was not a proper subject for a court challenge because it was not itself a "final agency action".
It was a drumbeat from lawyers seeing a potentially monstrous payday.
See also asbestos, black mold, and restaurants, had Congress not shut that down.
Imagine shithole lawyers suing restaurants for fatty food so they can line their their scummy pockets, breaking an entire industry.
It was a drumbeat from lawyers seeing a potentially monstrous payday. See also asbestos, black mold, and restaurants, had Congress not shut that down
Don't forget sketchy claims based on childish, silly superstition.
I am thrilled to defeat your entire argument and the basis for so many dumb things you say
An Obstacle to the Left’s Defense of Affirmative Action: Race Is a Biological Mythhttps://spectator.org/an-obstacle-to-the-lefts-defense-of-affirmative-action-race-is-a-biological-myth/
Rev, look up ‘octaroon’ whether in the Deep South or in Nazi Germany and realize , maybe for the first time in your life, that race — the very term— is racist. But I suppose from your liberal arts rants that you really just hate science and math ????
the closest analog to you --- to use one of your favorite fancy words -- is Biden
What? No. It reviewed the Harvard and UNC admissions practices.
I’m not sure that’s strictly true either. The Supreme Court didn’t review the Harvard and UNC admission policies directly. It reviewed the admissions decisions denying certain of SFFA’s members admission, giving SFFA standing to file a class action on behalf of its members and similarly situated applicants. The admissions decisions were the basis of the litigation. The policies only came up in the context of reviewing the admissions decisions.
And just as the admissions policies got indirectly reviewed because they were the basis of the admissions decisions, the memo got indirectly reviewed because it was the basis of the policies. After all, the Supreme Court opinion included considerable discussion of the memo and its categories as applied to college admissions. That’s a kind of review, is it not?
After all, the Supreme Court technically speaking doesn’t review criminal statutes either. It only reviews convictions, or enforcement activities for preemptive challenges. Even statutes get reviewed only indirectly, to the extent they serve as the basis for convictions or enforcement activities. Courts review the actions that provide the basis for standing. Because statutes can’t themselves be sued and the mere existence of a criminal statute doesn’t create standing, even criminal statutes don’t get directly reviewed. Same here.
Prof. Bernstein really seems to be quite bothered by the prospect of any special treatment for a group -- well, except for one group . . .
As we all already know from the record in the case, these were the federally-mandated reporting categories. The universities used much finer-grained classifications for actual admissions decisions.
That this was ignored by the majority is just one more example of this court making up facts inconvenient to its outcome preferences. Other well-known examples are Kennedy, 303 Creative, and Bruen.
Anyway, there's nothing new about any of that. What is new is the extent to which this “law review” abstract reads like a college application essay. Too much University Admissions on the brain? The self-promotion is perfectly precious-yet-clumsy.
Maybe retitle it!
As we all already know, Randal keeps lying about this.
Much as this professor lies about objecting to any and all classifications. His objections are partisan and selective.
The Volokh Conspiracy: Official "Legal" Blog of Lies and Liars
One does get the sense that David would've been on the other side of SFFA if only there'd been a Jewish reporting category, doesn't one.
Most of you are situational ethicists, the high valuation of a philosophical principle when it supports your already decided-upon position, and the low valuation of it from the same skull gearbox when it gets in the way of a different one.
The thesis/antithesis/synthesis dialectic you learned in school is actually a primer on dishonesty.
Still, you buy into 'race' so are part of the problem too
The Myth of Race
The Troubling Persistence of an Unscientific Idea
Robert Wald Sussman
"Biological races do not exist—and never have. This view is shared by all scientists who study variation in human populations. Yet racial prejudice and intolerance based on the myth of race remain deeply ingrained in Western society. In his powerful examination of a persistent, false, and poisonous idea, "
Just because race isn't biological doesn't mean it's false or poisonous.
Since it would've been used — just as in the past — to ensure there weren't "too many" Jews, I don't see why he would've been, no.
Can't think of any circumstances in which Jews -- who have been abused by others -- currently hold the upper hand and have classified themselves as specially privileged at the expense of others?
Happy to do this again, if you want. From oral at SCOTUS for example (keeping in mind that something like "Middle Eastern" isn't one of the federal reporting categories, and that the Common Application asks about the federal categories for reporting purposes and self-disclosure for anything beyond that):
(Slightly edited for artifacts of speech.)
You can say it again - and you will be wrong again. The record of how those universities actually used race was well-developed in the record. And it really was that simplistic (and arbitrarily discriminatory).
Yes, it was well-developed that they looked deeper than these reporting categories. The lower courts found that they looked deeper — SCOTUS ignored that too.
Are you suggesting they lied in oral arguments, for example?
Also, what possible reason would they have to artificially limit themselves to those categories? The universities agreed with David that those categories are too coarse and arbitrary.
Not for their actual purposes, rather than their nominal ones.
Sadly for me, I've become sympathetic to this argument given that the dissents basically and disappointingly confirmed it.
Still, I don't think this assumption of bad faith is enough to overcome the clear record.
Making up facts is what CA6 did with the de nova finding of facts.
The district court thought they could pull a similar stunt either CA1 playing along with the shenanigans
Using racial classifications is racist.
Being racist is a bad thing.
I am confident you would recognize an exception for race-targeting, conservative vote suppressors working for the Republican Party.
"I am confident" means I hold a bigoted racist view of you.
You are a major racist on here and as St Augustine sagely said "We see what we ARE"
Great article–quick note-looks like there may be some typos on p. 21 line 4 (it’s/its), line 6 (SFSA instead of SFFA) and 5th line from the end (same)...
Thanks. Still has to go through the editing process.