This Article combines analysis of case law at state and federal levels as well as federal educational policy in an effort to formulate a framework for addressing educational inequalities, of which the achievement gap is only one result. As individual rights concepts control the discourse of equal educational opportunity, community injury continues to be ignored. Because educational policy aimed at ending educational inequities is governed by equal protection analysis and guided by court decisions, limitations in legal opinions drive such policies. The lack of attention to community harm in law and educational policy limits the ability of education legal reforms and education policy initiatives to address the scope of the problem of educatio...
This paper is driven by the research questions: Why do racial and economic inequities persist in the...
Addresses the need to remedy the disparity in academic achievement of black and white students and e...
This article explores why the promise of ending our dual society, as first articulated in Brown v. B...
This Article combines analysis of case law at state and federal levels as well as federal educationa...
Public education, in most states, is funded in substantial part from local property taxes. As a resu...
Since 1896, the issue of “separate but equal” has been an ever present notion in American society. ...
Despite failure to improve academic outcomes or close the achievement gap, school-choice policies, a...
Inadequate schools impede America\u27s long-standing quest for greater equal educational opportunity...
The academic achievement gap between poor, minority students and their wealthier white peers has bee...
Fifty years after the Brown decision monumentally drew issues of equality to the fore, equality cont...
Although the Supreme Court struck down the voluntary race-based student-assignment plans employed in...
Today the measure of equal education for black children often is the racial composition of the schoo...
Although the U.S. Constitution espouses equality, it clearly is not practiced in all aspects of life...
This Essay examines the continuing significance of the Keyes decision to the judicial vision of equa...
In 1954, the Supreme Court ruled that public education is a right which must be made available to al...
This paper is driven by the research questions: Why do racial and economic inequities persist in the...
Addresses the need to remedy the disparity in academic achievement of black and white students and e...
This article explores why the promise of ending our dual society, as first articulated in Brown v. B...
This Article combines analysis of case law at state and federal levels as well as federal educationa...
Public education, in most states, is funded in substantial part from local property taxes. As a resu...
Since 1896, the issue of “separate but equal” has been an ever present notion in American society. ...
Despite failure to improve academic outcomes or close the achievement gap, school-choice policies, a...
Inadequate schools impede America\u27s long-standing quest for greater equal educational opportunity...
The academic achievement gap between poor, minority students and their wealthier white peers has bee...
Fifty years after the Brown decision monumentally drew issues of equality to the fore, equality cont...
Although the Supreme Court struck down the voluntary race-based student-assignment plans employed in...
Today the measure of equal education for black children often is the racial composition of the schoo...
Although the U.S. Constitution espouses equality, it clearly is not practiced in all aspects of life...
This Essay examines the continuing significance of the Keyes decision to the judicial vision of equa...
In 1954, the Supreme Court ruled that public education is a right which must be made available to al...
This paper is driven by the research questions: Why do racial and economic inequities persist in the...
Addresses the need to remedy the disparity in academic achievement of black and white students and e...
This article explores why the promise of ending our dual society, as first articulated in Brown v. B...