It is both fitting and gratifying that Diversity in America has elicited such richly diverse comments from the Symposium participants. Their contributions teach me about some of the implications of my own book. More important, they refine and advance the debates that I had hoped to provoke in writing it. For all this, I am indebted to the participants, and I offer my responses in the same constructive, analytical spirit that their comments so admirably exhibit. I shall try to do so without repeating much of what I wrote in the book. One purpose of this Symposium, after all, is to get non-participants to pick it up and read it
Over the past decade or more there have been strong pressures to abolish the diversity jurisdiction ...
Getting a Rise Out of Diversity: Celebrating the Challenge took on hard questions of diversity, whi...
In Grutter v. Bollinger, the United States Supreme Court addressed the issue of whether diversity is...
It is both fitting and gratifying that Diversity in America has elicited such richly diverse comment...
Peter Schuck\u27s remarkably comprehensive and vigorously argued work is a major contribution to our...
Peter Schuck\u27s Diversity In America: Keeping Government at a Safe Distance makes a thoughtful and...
Peter Schuck\u27s Diversity in America makes the most important contribution in recent years to the ...
It is odd that an empiricist such as myself would be asked to lead off a conference by writing and t...
This essay is part of a symposium on affirmative action that took place at the University of Cincinn...
This article argues that both the Court in its defense of diversity and the commentators in their cr...
In contrast to the 1977 Founding Conference, when a much smaller number of participants concentrated...
We asked discussants for the 1983 Conference to summarize their responses to the papers in their ses...
With a few visionary exceptions, it is not until the 1960s, and then largely in the United States, t...
(Excerpt) The topic of our afternoon panel, Achieving Diversity in the Classroom, grows out of the...
This is the text of The Lindley Lecture for 1996, given by T.M. Scanlon, an American philosopher
Over the past decade or more there have been strong pressures to abolish the diversity jurisdiction ...
Getting a Rise Out of Diversity: Celebrating the Challenge took on hard questions of diversity, whi...
In Grutter v. Bollinger, the United States Supreme Court addressed the issue of whether diversity is...
It is both fitting and gratifying that Diversity in America has elicited such richly diverse comment...
Peter Schuck\u27s remarkably comprehensive and vigorously argued work is a major contribution to our...
Peter Schuck\u27s Diversity In America: Keeping Government at a Safe Distance makes a thoughtful and...
Peter Schuck\u27s Diversity in America makes the most important contribution in recent years to the ...
It is odd that an empiricist such as myself would be asked to lead off a conference by writing and t...
This essay is part of a symposium on affirmative action that took place at the University of Cincinn...
This article argues that both the Court in its defense of diversity and the commentators in their cr...
In contrast to the 1977 Founding Conference, when a much smaller number of participants concentrated...
We asked discussants for the 1983 Conference to summarize their responses to the papers in their ses...
With a few visionary exceptions, it is not until the 1960s, and then largely in the United States, t...
(Excerpt) The topic of our afternoon panel, Achieving Diversity in the Classroom, grows out of the...
This is the text of The Lindley Lecture for 1996, given by T.M. Scanlon, an American philosopher
Over the past decade or more there have been strong pressures to abolish the diversity jurisdiction ...
Getting a Rise Out of Diversity: Celebrating the Challenge took on hard questions of diversity, whi...
In Grutter v. Bollinger, the United States Supreme Court addressed the issue of whether diversity is...