The Volokh Conspiracy
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Federal Agencies Neglect Anti-Asian Discrimination in Education
My wife Alison Somin, an attorney with the Pacific Legal Foundation, outlines the problem.

My wife, Alison Somin (an attorney with the Pacific Legal Foundation, and former special assistant at the US Commission on Civil Rights) has an article about anti-Asian discrimination in education, and how federal agencies have mostly ignored it:
Discrimination against Asian-American students in admissions at selective universities has been an open secret for decades. An entire cottage industry even coached ambitious applicants on how to be less Asian. Data produced in litigation showed that for applicants with academic credentials in the top 10 percent of Harvard's pool, the odds of admission were 56.1 percent for African Americans, 31.3 percent for Hispanics, and 15.3 percent for whites, but only 12.6 percent for Asian Americans. In emails uncovered in the parallel lawsuit against the University of North Carolina, admissions officers were candid about preferring applicants of other races over Asian Americans. One representative exchange: "perfect 2400 SAT All 5 on AP one B in 11th" "Brown?!" "Heck no. Asian."
Yet the federal agencies charged with enforcing civil rights laws prohibiting this discrimination largely have done nothing in response. These agencies could have issued guidance emphasizing that such discrimination is forbidden or pursued targeted investigations against universities widely suspected of discrimination. But they have not….
Selective public magnet schools also discriminate against Asian Americans. The Fairfax County School Board restructured its admissions process to lower the number of Asian Americans at Thomas Jefferson High School, a top science and technology magnet program. The Board did not hide its intent: litigation produced private text messages, stating "there has been an anti [A]sian feel underlying some of this, hate to say it lol" and that Asian students were "discriminated against in this process." They lamented that "Asians hate us."
Represented by my firm, Pacific Legal Foundation, a parent group called the Coalition for TJ fought back, claiming that the changes violated the Constitution. Their case is currently pending a writ of certiorari at the Supreme Court.
School officials in Boston, New York City, and Montgomery County, Maryland, have similarly revised admissions procedures to lower the numbers of Asian American students in magnet schools there. In Boston, school officials were even caught mocking Asian American surnames on a hot microphone. In each of these cities, parent groups have sued, represented by Pacific Legal Foundation. These cases are pending in the federal appellate courts.
Again, federal civil rights agencies could have opened targeted investigations into anti-Asian discrimination in any of these school districts. They could have issued guidance letters reminding school boards of their legal obligations. They have not. In Coalition for TJ v. Fairfax County School Board, the Department of Justice even filed an amicus brief in the Fourth Circuit supporting the discriminating school district. It is difficult to imagine a similarly indifferent federal response if school officials spoke about members of any other racial group the way Fairfax County and Boston officials talked about Asian-American students.
What can be done to address this problem? As Alison suggests, a valuable first step would be for federal officials to deal with anti-Asian discrimination in education the same way they would with any other discrimination targeting racial minorities. The Supreme Court's recent decision in SFFA v. Harvard is the first Supreme Court ruling to take account of anti-Asian discrimination in higher education, and will make it easier to pursue remedies against it.
In previous writings about this issue, I and others have compared today's anti-Asian discrimination in education with anti-Semitic discrimination practiced by many elite educational institutions in the early to mid twentieth century. Recent outbreaks of anti-Semitism on campus in the wake of the Israel-Hamas war further highlight parallels between the two cases.
The distinctive left-wing version of anti-Semitism - focusing on the economic role of Jews - has some obvious parallels with left-wing rationales for anti-Asian discrimination. Both groups are stigmatized for their relatively high levels of success in education and business. Far-leftists tend to look on such success with suspicion, and this ideology has disproportionate sway in many educational institutions. On top of that, any group with a disproportionately high representation at elite schools (relative to their percentage of the population) makes it harder to achieve the goal of proportionate representation of all ethnic groups, an objective dear to hearts of many left-wing university officials.
The political right has its own awful history of both anti-Semitism and anti-Asian bigotry. But that in no way justifies the left-wing variants of these phenomena or vice versa.
As Alison notes, she is co-counsel for the plaintiffs in the Coalition for TJ case. I previously wrote about that case here and here.
Skeptics and conspiracy theorists (though not Volokh Conspiracy theorists!) may discount what I say on this topic because my wife is involved. But, for what it's worth, my interest in both anti-Asian discrimination in education and the more general issue of the use of "facially neutral" policies for discriminatory purposes long predates Alison's work on the TJ case. I first became interested in these problems when I attended a high school with a large number of Asian students in the late 1980s and early 90s (graduating in 1991). Classmates were worried about discrimination in elite-university admissions even back then.
UPDATE: It's worth noting that the Department of Education recently opened investigations into anti-Semitic discrimination at several universities and in NYC public schools. Whether they will take any meaningful action on anti-Asian discrimination in admissions remains to be seen.
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Hmmm, seems like the treatment of Asian applicants is
a bit,
"Slanted"
Frank
Me Chinese
Me play joke
Me put Covid in your throat!
Poor taste doesn't even begin to describe this disgusting post. The idea that Asian-Americans are somehow to be associated with COVID (which pretty obviously came from the Wuhan lab) is just awful. Maybe this is an attempt at humor. But it isn't.
Just keep in mind that the reason they put the lab in Wuhan in the first place is that that’s where the coronaviruses that they wanted to study are.
Everyone knows that asians are simply cat's-paws for the whites who are manipulating things behind the scenes. /sarc
"Progressives" actually do routinely make that argument, claiming that the Asian plaintiffs in SFFA were being "used" by the evil conservative whites.
If you believe in diversity for the sake of diversity, you have to tilt the scales against overrepresented groups. That's just physics.
Where do these laws say it's okay to discriminate on the basis of race "[i]f you believe in diversity for the sake of diversity"?
That is considered a "compelling interest" to the racists in Education so totally fine to enact racist policy in furtherance of their DIE agenda.
I am not following the logic. Do you define diversity as equal representation across race and gender?
That's because "diversity for the sake of diversity" in an illogical concept.
No, not equal. It works like this. When you’re selecting for slots on a team / group, diversity is one of the criteria. So, for example, if you already have a couple excellent mathematicians, he’s Mexican and she’s Iranian, you’d choose the Icelandic man over the Mexican woman for your third mathematician since he would add more diversity to the team (assuming they were similarly qualified mathematicians).
That means that if a lot of Mexican mathematicians apply, they’re going to have a harder time getting accepted because they contribute less to the diversity of the team. Of course, if they're the best mathematicians, you might have more Mexicans than any other nationality... because equality isn't the goal. Diversity is just one thing to think about when assembling a team, not the only thing.
Except there is zero evidence that a group of mathematicians assembled to have a diversity of race will be any better than groups assembled for diversity of shoe size or, handedness, or eye color, or preference for lutefisk.
Can't agree with that, Abdul. For anyone old enough to compare today's public-facing intelligentsia to the one seen in the 1960s, the evidence looks overwhelming. Except as overtly race-oriented political organizers, black people were all but unrepresented in public life 60 years ago. Now blacks are seen everywhere, very evidently and with notable excellence contributing to American policy and public life in countless fields of endeavor. Policies of diversity and affirmative action account for that change over time; those policies discounted meritocracy to instead prioritize benefits for blacks, and it worked.
Among the public-figure blacks I follow there are several who could wipe the floor in a debate with anyone who writes for this blog, or comments on it. It gives me pleasure to be instructed by the excellence of their insights, and to enjoy the style of their commentary.
Having grown up amidst Jim Crow society operating full strength in the South, that change comes as a revelation. It is welcome of course, but also proof that this nation has gained tremendously by choosing policies of diversity and affirmative action favoring blacks.
Of course that triumph came at the cost of frustrating advocates of pure meritocracy as the only just means to sort and reward would-be recipients of education, employment, money, office and honors. Fortunately, this nation has no legal requirement that anyone practice meritocracy. Meritocracy is not legally enforceable, and never will be.
That hasn't discouraged meritocracy's advocates from trying to use the law by proxy to enforce their preferred tool to organize society. They just avoid being explicit about it. Hence the recent fashion to complain about treatment of Asians. It avoids voicing candid demands that affirmative policies benefitting blacks be ended. Anti-affirmative action advocates hope instead to get legal victories mandating meritocracy in practice, without ever mentioning the term explicitly.
Shorter SL: Skin color is the most important thing.
... but also proof that this nation has gained tremendously by choosing policies of diversity and affirmative action favoring blacks.
What is proof that the nation has gained tremendously? You say this, but you've offered no hint of evidence. Just some "I like some black people" nonsense.
Then, you go on to whine about meritocracy. White knighting for those poor black folk who couldn't get ahead without your graciousness? You're disgusting. You purport to have grown up amidst Jim Crow, but it seems that Jim Crow never left you. You still think black people only succeed by the graces of the white left.
Another shorter SL: Black quarterbacks are worth all the harm caused by DEI and reverse discrimination.
That's the major example I can think of where we've made clear progress in the last century.
Always interesting to watch the Left Wingers here continue to justify racial discrimination. It's amazing that they haven't nominated Bull Conner for sainthood yet.
Vinni, skin color does count, to the extent that it has been used generally to identify victims for targeted policy discrimination. And that has been a very great extent.
As for poor black folks who can't get ahead, to prevent that has been an abiding objective of public policy in this nation for centuries, and SCOTUS is still at it.
Yes, discrimination often produces benefits for the people who are discriminated in favor. That's the point. You're favoring them to give them stuff. That doesn't show that there is a *net* benefit to discrimination.
"Hence the recent fashion to complain about treatment of Asians."
You say that as if Asians are not discriminated against. They have been since the coolie days in San Francisco.
Sure. And it was probably worse and deadlier in mining districts throughout the West. In addition, all sorts of other ethnic groups got discriminated against. But look around today, and two groups stand out because they still struggle against handicaps inflicted by policy: indigenous Americans and blacks. No other groups which have benefited from affirmative action, or other race- and ethnicity-based policies suffer today in any way comparable to those two. There are two reasons for that:
1. The policy abuses against those two groups were far more severe than against any others;
2. The policy abuses against those two groups were applied more consistently, and for much longer, than in other cases.
Those two cases are not like the others.
https://hbr.org/2016/11/why-diverse-teams-are-smarter
or preference for lutefisk
Hey, we have to draw a line somewhere.
I really don't. How well do universities reflect the diversity of various combinations of attached/detached earlobes? I have no idea and I don't care, because it doesn't matter. Chips fall where they may regardless of earlobe status. Race and everything else should be treated the same way.
Randal says:
That's just a more succinct restatement of the following paragraph from OP:
Fo sho. In other words, it's not a "version of anti-Semitism" at all. It has nothing to do with Jews qua Jews. It's just a statement of values that applies across all identity groups: you're not just competing with the population at large, you're also competing directly with others who share your demographics... to some extent at least.
"diversity for the sake of diversity"
More specifically, you mean diversity of skin pigmentation, right?
That's the only diversity the Left recognizes.
No. See above where my examples were gender and nationality. I would also accept geography, socioeconomics, athleticism, religion, philosophy (including political), sexual orientation, and cultural background (such as being a child of an active service member, royalty, crime family, Brangelina, hippies, etc.)... probably others too.
Also… allow me to turn the tables. Why are you so upset about racial discrimination, but not other ones like geography? Universities discriminate heavily based on geography. How come you’re so concerned about the white and Asian kids not getting their fair shake, but you couldn’t give a shit about the New York or Ohio kids?
Some schools are avoiding putting Chinese-Americans on research teams thinking the government will be suspicious and be less likely to fund their proposal.
1. Citation needed.
2. Still illegal.
I'm not so sure -- at least I hope not.
A security clearance is still (hopefully) a security clearance and it isn't racist to say that you have relatives in China who are vulnerable to CCP efforts.
Remember that China considers any person of ethnic Chinese ancestry to be a Chinese citizen and what that means.
I don't have a problem with *rational* discrimination.
Grants are not generally given out for classified projects, since the outcome is hopefully some published papers.
Remember that China considers any person of ethnic Chinese ancestry to be a Chinese citizen
China can say what they want, it shouldn’t effect our policies.
Using nonsense to justify discrimination does not make it rational.
Also, you did an Ed again:
article 5 of the Nationality Law states that a person whose parents are both Chinese nationals and have both settled abroad, or one of whose parents is a Chinese national and has settled abroad, and who has acquired foreign nationality at birth shall not have Chinese nationality.
https://www.clic.org.hk/en/topics/immigration/chinese_nationality
Gaslighto, I do NOT make things up. I know what the law says, but there is this:
“Beijing presents nationality as an elaborate legal question, but in practice the answer is simple. Only one rule applies: If you have ever held or could have held Chinese citizenship, you are a Chinese national unless Beijing decides you are not. And even if you were born abroad but you’re of Chinese descent, Beijing still feels as if it owns you”
See: https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/02/25/china-hong-kong-nationality-law-british-national-overseas-passport-visa/ and they then give some specific examples.
As to security clearances, we really need to have something to prevent something like what Senator Rand Paul is saying happened with the Wuhan Flu from ever happening again. If Trump wins next year, you could have someone like Rand Paul as Sec of H&HS and a whole bunch of new rules that you’re going to have to enforce.
Remember that China was running private police stations in this country so I don’t consider these concerns to be “nonsense.”
“ If you have ever held or could have held Chinese citizenship.”
Contemplate those words.
As to your Covid conspiracy, if Trump becomes President dumb new grants regs to administer are the least of my concerns.
Contemplate the implication of those words -- and the examples cited.
Mr. Ed,
Get back to the feed trough and spew your racism somewhere else.
"China can say what they want, it shouldn’t effect our policies. "
Exactly!
Diversity programs are all about White replacement. Nobody cares about Asians.
One of the few times I agree with Ilya Somin. But it's not just anti-Asian discrimination, it's also anti-white discrimination.
compare (source):
[T]he civil rights movement has come to be hostile to the American Founding, come to deny the "truth" of "all men are created equal," with the result that the most important spokesmen for black America cannot give an account any longer of the moral grounds of their own rights. And in striking contrast, it is the conservative movement now that can explain, in a far more compelling way, the ground for the rights of black people and the character of the Constitution that was meant to secure those "natural rights," for human persons of all races and at every stage of their lives.
In the aftermath of Brown v. Board of Education (1954), the question had to be raised: was the racial separation of students in schools something wrong in principle, or something whose wrongness would be contingent on the outcome? If the students were separated on the basis of race and their reading scores went up, and their motivation improved, would the segregation have ceased to be wrong? The litigating arm of the civil rights movement committed itself to a course of finding the wrong of segregation in the circumstances of each case, and carefully avoiding any statement of the wrong in principle. As a result perhaps of arguing for years in that vein, the lawyers for the movement seemed to lose the sense of how to make that argument in principle. And as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 morphed into "affirmative action" and "racial preferences," the avoidance of any argument in principle became itself one of the adamant convictions of the movement. If it were wrong in principle to assign benefits and disabilities on the basis of race, then those racial preferences would be quite as wrong when they delivered benefits to black people at the expense of whites and Asians. But that is an understanding that has now been rejected as a heresy...
If it were wrong in principle to assign benefits and disabilities on the basis of race, then those racial preferences would be quite as wrong when they delivered benefits to black people at the expense of whites and Asians.
As always, for centuries, advocates to disadvantage blacks veer back and forth between discussions of principles, and discussions of policies.That fosters confusions, and advocates against blacks know how to take advantage of them.
Whatever offenses against principles may have been suffered by Asians in this nation, at present it is evident that actual policies have not much harmed them. That is why Asians are overrepresented as a class among students admitted to the nation's most-prestigious and competitive educational institutions.
In short, motivated discernment to identify invidious principles which harm Asians has not been effectively supported by discovery of comparably damaging policies. Asians in this nation cannot be credibly viewed as a class of victims.
Nobody should be confused. The experience of blacks remains the opposite. Successes accumulated steadily over decades show policies favoring blacks do work. But despite that, as a class blacks remain by almost every measure a class of policy victims. Along with indigenous Americans, blacks suffered far more policy harm than Asians. That makes it irresponsible to insist now on comparison of those contrasting class experiences on the basis of principles. The principles have proved demonstrably irrelevant to the results which policies actually delivered.
It will be time enough to return to principles after baleful policy effects burdening blacks have been corrected. To insist on reversing that order is to insist on locking historical injustice in place. Brandishing principles to distort history may fool some, but it will not fool the victims.
But the OTHER victims, who did not do a damned thing, screw them?
That is your proposal here?
Either race can be used to discriminate or it cannot. If it can, do not complain about the ramifications.
damikesc, your choice to demand exclusive reliance on principle, and to ignore policy and history is noted.
The question why you and so many others make that demand is the one which interests me.
So because history, a Cosby kid gets a break over some Hmong kid?
This is a complete misdiagnosis of the situation. Anti-black racism was eradicated decades ago and pro-black racism was the order of the day until a recent SCOTUS decision. The difference between the Asian experience and the Black one is cultural-- Asian culture values education and shuns crime. Black culture values crime and shuns education. Of course their results are worse. But any attempt to fix the culture are deemed racist. So liberals are trapped in the insane belief that just one more government program will turn a gangster into a scholar.
Anti-black racism was eradicated decades ago and pro-black racism was the order of the day until a recent SCOTUS decision. The difference between the Asian experience and the Black one is cultural– Asian culture values education and shuns crime. Black culture values crime and shuns education.
For anyone who supposes anti-black racism is gone, Someguy 2 wants your attention.
It’s cultural, not racial. If you take a random population and burden it with African-American culture, they’ll suffer worse results regardless of race. If you take a random population and bless it with Asian-American culture, they’ll do better regardless of race. Quick, name somebody in African-American culture who got famous and popular for singing about their crimes. You could go on for hours. Now, try the same thing for Asian-Americans. There’s a few, but it’s incredibly rare. A culture that embraces crime as a primary value may survive, but it is not going to thrive.
Someguy 2, you don't know when to quit, do you? You don't even have an inkling why your remarks are flagrantly racist. Too many people like you is why racism against blacks keeps going. Too many flagrant racists think they are not racist at all.
The facts speak for themselves. African-Americans really are truant from school at a higher rate (devaluing education). Glamorizing crime is really part of African-American culture, hence gangster rap and higher crime rates among African-Americans (check the crime victimization reports). These are things that African-Americans disproportionately choose to do, not things that are done to them. Of course they're going to have worse results if they don't bother to go to school and then rob liquor stores for fun.
Fix the culture that worships crime and demeans education as “too white” and they would prosper. But we can’t even have the conversation, the minute you start talking about culture crime-enablers declare racism. This is of course nonsense. There are numerous critiques of Byzantine culture and why it is partially responsible for the final fall of Byzantium. You can discuss them without being accused of being anti-Greek. Same thing here.
"Whatever offenses against principles may have been suffered by Asians in this nation, at present it is evident that actual policies have not much harmed them. That is why Asians are overrepresented as a class among students admitted to the nation’s most-prestigious and competitive educational institutions."
This doesn't follow at all. If Asians are good enough that they should make up 90% of a student body without discriminating against them, discriminating so that they can only be 50% is darn well harmful to that 40%.
KenveeB, you mean good enough by meritocratic standards, right?
“Whatever offenses against principles may have been suffered by Asians in this nation, at present it is evident that actual policies have not much harmed them. That is why Asians are overrepresented as a class among students admitted to the nation’s most-prestigious and competitive educational institutions.”
Based on that, would you agree that a black employee who’s twice as productive as a white employee in a similar role but only gets paid 5% more can’t possibly be a victim of racism? She’s doing better than her white colleague so it’s all good, right? Or does that logic only apply to Asians?
There's no reason to assume that individuals and groups aren't being harmed by discrimination just because they're doing well overall relative to other individuals or groups.
Savagely Average, any notion that statistically over-privileged groups are suffering harmful discrimination requires more than supposition for support; it requires measurement by agreed-upon standards. What standards other than meritocratic ones do you suppose courts should rely on to enforce that notion as fact?
First, I note you didn’t my question in the hypothetical above. Can a black employee who’s crushing her white colleagues in productivity but only getting paid a fraction more be a victim of anti-black racism? Based on the argument you use about Asians, if she’s getting paid more then she’s “over-privileged” and thus can’t be a victim. That seems pretty clearly wrong, no? And isn’t “meritocratic” evidence (the black employee’s high productivity) relevant to determining whether there’s racism at play here? I don’t understand your problem with “meritocratic” evidence.
Second, your use of the phrase “statistically over-privileged” pretty much gives the game away. I take it from that that you believe any racial group (leaving aside whether ‘Asians’ are even properly considered a ‘racial group’) that succeeds at a higher-than-average rate is inherently a beneficiary of unearned privilege. Obviously, if you regard all success as due not to talent and hard work but to unearned privilege then you have no moral qualms about redistributing resources and opportunities however you see fit. I don’t think that approach makes for a society that values effort and initiative.
Savagely Average, I didn't address your hypothetical because I am talking about law and policy, not about personal justice in the workplace. To note the distinction, ask yourself if you know of any law which requires employees to be compensated on the basis of their relative productivities.
I am not talking either about whether success is earned or unearned, although there are obvious problems in that area if you intend to consider group success instead of individual accomplishment.
My commentary has been to point out that however advantageous you think meritocracy might be as a means to organize an economy—or a social status hierarchy, for that matter—meritocracy cannot be made a legal requirement. I suspect any effort to do that would fail legal scrutiny on the basis of equal protection of the laws. But leaving strictly legal questions aside, in a democracy meritocracy cannot work without assent from the majority judged less meritorious that they deserve less access to education, employment, money, social status, and honors. That seems like an unlikely political occurrence, when the unworthy minority will always command a majority.
That is before you get to the fraught question of who gets to define merit, and to make the case-by-case distinctions on which so much will turn, to delight the meritorious and dismay the others. Legal imposition of meritocracy is subject which could not even be broached, let alone enacted, without major political upheavals.
Finally, how can anyone survey the evident success of this nation's growing class of black professionals, and fail to understand that the policies that made that possible were precisely policies to cherish effort and initiative all the more, by extending that consideration to blacks as well as to others?
FWIW, SFFA wasn't as clear as it could have been about anti-Asian discrimination. The majority, just like the dissents, treated the issue as a Black-White issue, even though the claims were brought by and on behalf of Asian plaintiffs.
If you want DOJ to act, you probably need a SCOTUS decision that is very clear that if a program is structured to disadvantage Asians, it is unconstitutional.
It may be going international.
In Minneapolis a person on the government payroll kills a Black person and Black Lives Matter is an acceptable and widely applauded motto.
In Ireland a person on the government payroll stabs three Irish children and “Irish Lives Matter!” is written on a fence. This writing, not the stabbing, is being investigated as a hate crime. This won’t end well.
The Coalition for TJ case goes to conference tomorrow. I cannot see how the goofy 4th Circuit decision stands in the wake of SFFA (and the Fourth Circuit issuing it knowing SCOTUS was about to issue the SFFA opinion was a shocking display of chutzpa).
Any bets on whether we see an order on Monday GVR'ing that case to reconsider in light of SFFA? I suspect the Kagen-Sotomajor-Jackson wing would much prefer that to the court taking the case (which likely would yield a decision expanding SFFA)!