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BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS. Overview. Civil Rights seek to correct for unequal rights for minorities in the original constitution. Discrimination persisted for 100 years after passage of the 13 th , 14 th , 15 th amendments Despite 1964 Civil Rights Act, unequal treatment remains a challenge.
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Overview • Civil Rights seek to correct for unequal rights for minorities in the original constitution. • Discrimination persisted for 100 years after passage of the 13th, 14th, 15th amendments • Despite 1964 Civil Rights Act, unequal treatment remains a challenge. • Affirmative Action, which goes beyond equal opportunity, faces resistance
What Are Civil Rights? • Laws and policies intended to redress historical inequalities in rights of minorities • Efforts under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment
Civil Rights Distinguished From Civil Liberties • Civil Liberties: individual rights • CR: group rights • Civil Liberties: emphasize liberty • Civil Rights: emphasize equality • Civil Liberties: limit government action • Civil Rights: demand government action
Early Constitutional History • 3/5 compromise, fugitive slave and slave trade provisions of Constitution • Framers hoped slavery would just wither away. By 1850, monetary value of slaves exceeded monetary combined value of bank accounts, businesses, and real estate.
Wm. L. Garrison: Constitution is “a covenant with death, an agreementswith hell”
Civil War and Lincoln • Southern states said it was to protect states’ rights and called it “the war of northern aggression” • But Confederate state constitutions affirmed slavery • Lincoln made war about emancipation
Reconstruction • Constitutional amendments 13, 14, 15 • Reconstruction: Freedman’s Bureau versus Black Codes • 1875 Civil Rights Act prohibited discrimination in public accommodations
Post Reconstruction • Civil Rights Cases 1883—ruled 1875 Civil Rights Act unconstitutional; 14th Amendment only applies to state laws • Plessy v. Ferguson 1896 “Separate but equal” was constitutional • “Jim Crow” segregation until 1964
Great Migration • 1916-1970 6 million blacks move to North
1964 Civil Rights Act • Discrimination by “public accommodations” against federal law • State and local government agencies will lose federal funding if they discriminate • Authorized attorney general to sue school districts that discriminate
1964 Civil Rights Act-continued • Victims of discrimination may sue violators in federal court • Title VII—employment discrimination against the law. Applies to women, too. • Barred unequal voter registration procedures
Voting Rights • 1965 Voting Rights Act created further protections for right to vote • Justice Department registers voters and reviews any changes in voter procedures in specific states (mostly in south) • Outlawed “racial gerrymandering” • A federal crime to interfere with voting rights
Shelby v. Holder 2013 • Landmark Supreme Court case overturned key provision of Voting Rights Act • Voting Rights Act required pre-clearance by Justice Department for state changes in voting laws. • Court declared formula for determining which jurisdiction require pre-clearance to be outdated • Voter ID laws now in 35 states and discriminatory impact
Limits of Civil Rights • White flight and de facto segregation—impact on educational opportunity • Higher poverty rates—27% vs 10% • Economic inequality—average net worth of blacks $17,000 vs. Whites $170,000 • Unemployment rates—6.1% vs. 3.2% • Incarceration rates—6X whites
Institutional Racism • Racial inequalities that are not rooted in individual attitudes but in our social institutions.
Example: Job Networks • Whites in general have better connections
Is Equal Opportunity Enough? • Equal opportunity is widely supported • The reality as President Johnson saw it—”You can’t remove the chains of oppression and simply expect a fair race.”
Affirmative Action • A series of government regulations, court decisions, employer and university admissions policies. • Applies mainly to employment and higher education • Federal employment practices and federal contracts that seek to increase employment of disadvantaged minorities • Similar rules adopted by state agencies and private employers
Is Affirmative Action Unfair? • It depends. • The ideal is being racially neutral—being judged by “the content of one’s character” • Studies reveal hidden racial biases in most of us
Discussion • Take the implicit discrimination test: • https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/takeatest.html • What gives rise to implicit discrimination? • What impact does implicit discrimination have on racial equality? • How does implicit discrimination limit federal efforts to create racial equality?
“Strict Scrutiny” Standard • Supreme Court applies strict scrutiny standard to affirmative action. • Any law that classifies citizens based on race or national origins must be for a compelling government interest and must be narrowly drawn. • Some affirmative action policies overturned, others affirmed by this standard.
Bakke v. University of California 1978 • 16 slots in UC-Davis medical school admissions class reserved for blacks, with a separate process for selection • David Bakke, white applicant, denied admission despite higher scores and grades than some blacks • Supreme Court ruled that quotas are not legal, but affirmative action is permitted as a plus factor. • Current case at Harvard claims affirmative action harms Asian applicants
2003 University of Michigan Cases • Gratz v. Bollinger (undergrads); Grutter v. Bollinger (law school) • Undergraduate admissions policy offered bonus points (20 out of 150) for race • Law school admissions isn’t a rigid formula, but rather a case-by-case review that allows for consideration of applicant’s race.
Supreme Court Decision • Affirmative Action is constitutional: a diverse student body qualifies as a compelling state interest • Undergraduate admissions process (point system) was not narrowly tailored, was an implicit quota hence not acceptable • Law school process was narrowly tailored. • But would it be practical for undergraduate admissions?
Alternatives to Race-Based Affirmative Action • Racially blind admissions—merit based. • University of California looks for “relative achievement” rather than just high SATs • Texas—top 10% of all graduating high school classes are automatically accepted.
Current Case • Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard 2019 district court case • SFFA claims that Asian Americans must meet a higher standard for admissions in order to make more room for African Americans. • Pits two minority groups against each other
2019 College Admissions Scandal • Parents bribed admissions officials, coaches, test administrators to gain admission for their children. • It is perfectly legal to give preferences to children of rich donors and alumni.
Discussion • “Congress Debates Reparations” • https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jun/19/reparations-ta-nehisi-coates-cory-booker-congress-debate • Supported by C. Booker, K. Harris, and other candidates. • Are reparations a just solution to America’s racial inequalities?