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Affirmative Action at the Supreme Court: Post-Decision Analysis of SFFA v. Harvard/UNC

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Manhattan Institute

The Manhattan Institute hosted virtual event covering the Supreme Court’s upcoming blockbuster decision in two cases that challenge the use of racial preferences in highereducation admissions. A group called Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA) sued Harvard University and the University of North Carolina—the nation’s oldest private and public universities, respectively—over their affirmative action policies, which the group contends are unconstitutional because they discriminate against Asian Americans. The challengers argue that the Fourteenth Amendment and Title VI—the federal law that forbids race discrimination by private educational institutions that receive federal funding—require a raceneutral approach to accepting potential students.

In the 1978 Regents of the University of California v. Bakke case, the Supreme Court turned back a constitutional challenge to the use of race in admissions, allowing race to be considered as one of many factors. In 2003, the Court in Grutter v. Bollinger again narrowly upheld raceconscious admission practices, provided that they are “narrowly tailored” to further studentbody diversity. The Court noted, however, that public universities' use of such admissions policies "must be limited in time."

Our virtual postdecision analysis on SFFA v. Harvard and SFFA v. UNC, featuring Gail Heriot, MI book fellow, member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, and University Professor at the San Diego School of Law; and Wai Wah Chin, MI adjunct fellow and founding president of the Chinese American Citizens Alliance of Greater New York. The event will be moderated by Ilya Shapiro, MI senior fellow and director of constitutional studies. Ed Blum, founder of SFFA and architect behind this litigation, was unable to attend.

posted by Gutzbergf7