The Supreme Court has held repeatedly that race-based preferences in public university admissions are constitutional. But debates over the wisdom of affirmative action continue. Opponents of these policies argue that preferences are detrimental to minority students -- that by placing these students in environments that are too competitive, affirmative action hurts their academic and career outcomes. This article examines the so-called "mismatch" hypothesis in the context of law school admissions. We discuss the existing scholarship on mismatch, identifying methodological limitations of earlier attempts to measure the effects of affirmative action. Using a simpler, more robust analytical strategy, we find that the data are inconsistent with ...
This paper is a response to Richard Sander’s latest work challenging the notion that race based affi...
Affirmative action has been at the forefront of educational policies and to this day continues to en...
When I attended Michigan Law School in 1966, as a 2L Harvard transfer, there was only one, or perhap...
The Supreme Court has held repeatedly that race-based preferences in public university admissions ar...
An important criticism of race-based higher education admission preferences is that they may hurt mi...
The use of affirmative action policies in school admissions has been a continuing source of controve...
Last year\u27s Supreme Court decisions on affirmative action, Gratz and Grutter, are dubious as cons...
This article is a response to Richard H. Sander\u27s article, A Systemic Analysis of Affirmative Act...
Affirmative action continues to be one of the most controversial programs in American society. For e...
In an article in Stanford Law Review, Richard Sander argues that the practice of American law school...
This article will highlight the legal limitations law schools confront when adopting diversity admis...
There are consistent messages to people of color about their proper place in society, which has alwa...
Richard Sander\u27s study of affirmative action at U.S. law schools highlights a real and serious pr...
This article examines a number of key issues posed by the Supreme Court\u27s recent decision to once...
This paper empirically evaluates the mismatch hypothesis by exploiting the quasi-experimental variat...
This paper is a response to Richard Sander’s latest work challenging the notion that race based affi...
Affirmative action has been at the forefront of educational policies and to this day continues to en...
When I attended Michigan Law School in 1966, as a 2L Harvard transfer, there was only one, or perhap...
The Supreme Court has held repeatedly that race-based preferences in public university admissions ar...
An important criticism of race-based higher education admission preferences is that they may hurt mi...
The use of affirmative action policies in school admissions has been a continuing source of controve...
Last year\u27s Supreme Court decisions on affirmative action, Gratz and Grutter, are dubious as cons...
This article is a response to Richard H. Sander\u27s article, A Systemic Analysis of Affirmative Act...
Affirmative action continues to be one of the most controversial programs in American society. For e...
In an article in Stanford Law Review, Richard Sander argues that the practice of American law school...
This article will highlight the legal limitations law schools confront when adopting diversity admis...
There are consistent messages to people of color about their proper place in society, which has alwa...
Richard Sander\u27s study of affirmative action at U.S. law schools highlights a real and serious pr...
This article examines a number of key issues posed by the Supreme Court\u27s recent decision to once...
This paper empirically evaluates the mismatch hypothesis by exploiting the quasi-experimental variat...
This paper is a response to Richard Sander’s latest work challenging the notion that race based affi...
Affirmative action has been at the forefront of educational policies and to this day continues to en...
When I attended Michigan Law School in 1966, as a 2L Harvard transfer, there was only one, or perhap...