Affirmative Activity: Origins, Controversies and Contradictions

$130.00

Carl L. Bankston Three
Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, USA

Serial: Social Bug, Justice and Status
BISAC: POL024000

Affirmative action is one of the near controversial policies of our fourth dimension. This book provides a succinct but comprehensive account of the historical background of affirmative action, including the complicated racial history that gave ascension to it and the changing significant of affirmative action in authorities and law, giving special attending to the part of the civil rights motility. The book traces the major court decisions that have defined how affirmative activity policies in didactics and employment may be used and that have defined the limitations of these policies. It gives particular attention to the emergence of the variety rationale and to how this became the key legal justification for affirmative action. The book describes how the Supreme Court has been as divided every bit American society in general on the question of affirmative activeness. It discusses the relevance of the changing composition of the American population for affirmative action, giving special attention to the Latino and Asian groups that have been the greatest office of demographic change in the Usa. It considers the ways in which multifariousness has become a complicated concept in this irresolute lodge.

These pages also devote attention to arguments that racial and indigenous affirmative action should be replaced past efforts of socioeconomic affirmative action that would be more relevant to gimmicky American society. Post-obit this discussion of social and economic change, this cursory volume examines the unlike ways in which affirmative activity is a problematic approach to social inequality. The book suggests that inequality is deeply rooted in social networks and cultural patterns, and that inequality therefore does not lend itself to redesign through planning. Information technology suggests, further, that affirmative action is based on the thought that upwards mobility tin be selectively encouraged across groups, without recognizing that universal upwardly movement is not possible. It provides an even-handed consideration of the "mismatch," qualification and stigma arguments. Finally, the volume looks at the possible future of affirmative action, considering pressures working against preferential policies in employment, education and the substantial support that these policies will continue to have.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

<p><b>Introduction: The Trouble of Affirmative Action: Summary of Rationale and Criticisms </p></b></i><p><b>Chapter ane.</b> Background: Slavery and Categorical Inequality </p></i><p><b>Affiliate 2.</b> The Civil Rights Era </p></i><p><b>Affiliate iii.</b> The Legal History of Affirmative Activity </p></i><p><b>Chapter 4.</b> The Demographic Transformation of America </p></i><p><b>Affiliate 5.</b> The Bug of Affirmative Activity as Social Policy </p></i><p><b>Conclusion:</b> </p></b><p><b>The Diverse Lodge and the Future of Affirmative Action </p></b></i><p><b>References </p></i></p></i>Well-nigh the Author </p></i></p></i>Alphabetize </p></b>

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eBook, Softcover