The Supreme Court is weighing whether to uphold or ban affirmative action nationwide, a move that could permanently alter the way colleges admit students based on race.
The U.S. Supreme Court is weighing this week whether to uphold or ban affirmative action nationwide, a move which could permanently alter the way colleges admit students based on race.
The history of affirmative action dates back to the 1960s civil rights movement. The law includes using training programs, outreach efforts and other positive steps to boost diversity in workplaces and universities. Supreme Court cases between 1978 and 2016 involving white applicants being rejected from prestigious universities and then suing for discrimination serve as a precedent for affirmative action policy today — but Asian Americans are now at the center of the debate.
SF teen arrested in connection with dragging death of Oakland baker The woman was dragged at least 50 feet by a getaway car as she tried to retrieve her belongings from a robber Cheng was involved in the campaign for Proposition 209, which banned affirmative action in California; as well as against a ballot measure that would've overturned Prop. 209 in 2020. Lee said that Prop. 209 is not a ban on affirmative action.
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