News

A Coalition of Civil Society Organisations, including the Centre for Democratic Development (CDD) Ghana, Abantu for Development and ...
Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) has issued three proposed rules to implement President Trump’s ...
Two years ago the Supreme Court upended decades of precedent by ruling that universities could no longer use affirmative ...
As the Stanford economist Thomas Sowell observed in his 2004 book Affirmative Action Around the World, the very meaning of the word discrimination now encompasses “things that no one would have ...
Race-based affirmative action was deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court last year — but Duke, Princeton, and Yale's share of Asian students have actually declined since the ruling.
Clashing interpretations over one of Martin Luther King’s most famous quotes have fueled a culture war over the merits of affirmative action and diversity and inclusion efforts.
Reflecting on the current era. W hen asked what makes this moment in U.S. history the right or wrong time to end affirmative action, Feingold pointed to the changes that occurred on the Supreme Court ...
The growing battle over corporate diversity practices, explained. The recent Supreme Court decision on affirmative action in college admissions emboldened objectors to corporate DEI practices.
In their lawsuits against affirmative action, Students For Fair Admission claimed to want to protect Asian Americans. A law professor explains why the Supreme Court ruling doesn’t achieve that goal.
Perhaps affirmative action has been more of a burden on us than we have been willing to admit, and Thomas’s triumph may speak for more Black Americans than we realize.