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Affirmative Action

"Affirmative action" refers to a set of federal policies and initiatives designed to redress years of discrimination and bigotry in employment and education based on color, race, religion, national origin and gender.

History

The actual phrase "affirmative action" was first used in President John F. Kennedy's 1961 Executive Order 10925, which required federal contractors to "take affirmative action to ensure that applicants are employed, and that employees are treated during employment, without regard to their race, creed, color, or national origin."

In 1967, President Johnson expanded the Executive Order to include affirmative-action requirements to benefit women.

During the Civil Rights Era in the 1960s, when the United States saw the gradual removal of discriminatory laws, affirmative-action policies required that active measures be taken to ensure that Blacks and other minorities enjoyed the same opportunities for promotions, salary increases, career advancement, school admissions, scholarships and financial aid that had been the nearly exclusive province of whites. Click here to read DiversityInc's articles on civil rights.

These affirmative-action programs worked to open business opportunities, supplier diversity, access to education and voting and civil rights. Along the way, other affirmative-action programs were passed including The Fair Housing Act of 1968, which prohibited housing discrimination and the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977, which outlawed the practice of redlining, in which bankers and lenders arbitrarily denied or limited financial services and mortgage loans to specific neighborhoods, generally because its residents were Black or poor.

In recent years, however, affirmative action has come under attack. Much of the opposition to affirmative action is framed on the grounds of so-called "reverse discrimination and unwarranted preferences."

The Supreme Court

In June 2009, the Supreme Court handed a victory to 20 white firefighters who had filed a landmark reverse-discrimination lawsuit against the city of New Haven, claiming they were unfairly denied promotions because they were white.

The Supreme Court's 5-4 ruling in the high-profile Ricci v. DeStefano favored white firefighters in a racial-discrimination case and dealt a blow to Judge (now Justice) Sonia Sotomayor, who earlier had ruled against the firefighters.

The firefighters sued New Haven in 2004, a year after the city refused to certify the results of an examination on which only white candidates for the positions of captain and lieutenant scored high enough to qualify for promotion. New Haven city officials countered that they were afraid of getting sued by Black firefighters if they only promoted the white and Latino firefighters.

The high court disagreed, overturning a 2008 decision Sotomayor had once endorsed when she was still a federal judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

Another high profile case—Michigan's ban on using affirmative action in college admissions—is winding its way through federal court again. In 2003, in two landmark cases, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the University of Michigan's use of race as a factor in admissions decisions. That decision was heralded as a boost for the continued need for affirmative action to level the playing field.

But in 2006, Michigan voters approved Proposal 2, a constitutional amendment that ended the use of affirmative action in college admissions. Civil-rights groups along with University of Michigan students, faculty and applicants sued in late 2006, charging the ballot measure approved by voters was unconstitutional.

Ward Connerly's Crusade

Conservative Black activist Ward Connerly successfully led the ballot drive for the Michigan affirmative-action ban as well as others in California, Washington and Nebraska.

Connerly, a businessman whose group, the American Civil Rights Coalition, is seeking to disassemble affirmative action nationwide, has spent millions of dollars on ballot initiatives and legal actions to end affirmative action.

Connerly's mission to end affirmative action began in 1995 in California when the former University of California regent championed Proposition 209, a ballot initiative that abolished affirmative action in California state hiring and contracting and public college admissions.

Despite his efforts, Colorado voters rejected a ban on affirmative action a year ago, while proposed bans did not reach the ballot in Arizona, Missouri and Oklahoma

The Fallout and What's Next

The ban on affirmative action in California has led to a huge drop in Latino, Black and American Indian student enrollment at the University of California flagship universities. Since Michigan banned affirmative action, the University of Michigan freshman class had 443 Black students in fall 2005 but only 290 by fall 2009. During the same period, the number of Latino students fell from 312 to 224 and the number of American Indian students fell from 57 to 21. Black, Latino and American Indian enrollment at the University of Michigan Law School dropped 31 percent, and at Wayne State University Medical School, enrollment has fallen 64 percent. (Sources: BAMN, The Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration, and Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary)

In 2008, BAMN succeeded at keeping Connerly's anti-affirmative-action initiative out of Arizona, Missouri and Oklahoma. BAMN is conducting a federal challenge against Michigan's Proposal 2 to strike down as unconstitutional statewide affirmative-action bans in Michigan and across the country.

Browse Our Affirmative Action Articles
SAT Racial Gap Widens
A record number of students took the SAT this year. But why is the gap increasing between Blacks and Latinos compared with whites and Asians? More»
Sonia Sotomayor: A Courageous Latina Leader
The confirmation of Sonia Sotomayor as the third woman and first Latino U.S. Supreme Court justice provides important insights into leadership practices among Latinas. More»
After 100 Years, Is the NAACP Still Relevant?
On its centennial, the NAACP faces the dire question of relevance. Find out if the new direction is saving the preeminent civil-rights organization. More»
What Is Sotomayor′s Real Commitment to Civil Rights?
A new report examines her legal decisions on civil rights and indicates what kind of justice she would be. More»
Discrimination: How Are Courts Ruling?
From sexual harassment to religious accommodation, employment law updates daily. Read the latest legal issues here. More»
Law Experts: Supreme Court Could Have Gone Further in Firefighters Case
Columbia Law School's Jamal Greene says the decision stopped short of invalidating major civil-rights law. More»
Supreme Court Rules for White Firefighters in Reverse-Discrimination Case
Is using race to determine promotions wrong? In a split vote, the Supreme Court rules in favor of white firefighters. More»
Affirmative Action: Why Is Ward Connerly Wrong?
DiversityInc CEO Luke Visconti explains why Connerly, who argues against a California program that balances admissions to demographics, fails to serve people equally. How can public schools overcome bias? More»
Is Sotomayor a 'Reverse Racist'?
Is Rush Limbaugh right? Find out what Obama's U.S. Supreme Court nominee said that may have caused conservatives to lash out against her. More»
Obama Nominates First Latina Supreme Court Justice
From a Bronx public-housing project to the president's Supreme Court pick, Sonia Sotomayor will bring a fresh perspective to the bench. Who is she? How did she rule on a critical affirmative-action case? More»
Does Reverse-Discrimination Really Exist? Supreme Court Hears Major Race Case
Today, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in a landmark reverse-bias case filed by a group of firefighters--one Latino and the rest are white--against the city of New Haven, Conn. What's really at stake here? More»
Why Did Connerlys Latest Anti-Affirmative-Action Plan Fail?
Ward Connerly launched successful anti-affirmative-action campaigns across the country. Find out why his latest attempt to thwart diversity in schools has failed. More»
Which People & Events Helped Shape Black History?
The history of Blacks in America has always been one marred by slavery, hatred and injustice, but it is also one filled with people and events that have had an enormously positive impact on society. DiversityInc takes a look at some of the most critical players and moments in Black history in this photo essay. More»
NAACP Turns 100, But Has Its Time Come & Gone?
Today the NAACP turns 100 and faces the dire question of relevance. Find out if the new direction is saving the preeminent civil-rights organization. More»
Are You a Victim of Reverse Discrimination?
Does "reverse discrimination" exist? Separate fact from fiction. More»
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