A Legacy of Discrimination, Geoffrey R. Stone
A Legacy of Discrimination, Geoffrey R. Stone
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A Legacy of Discrimination
The Essential Constitutionality of Affirmative Action

Author: Geoffrey R. Stone, Lee C. Bollinger

Narrator: Malcolm Hillgartner

Unabridged: 4 hr 51 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 04/04/2023


Synopsis

A timely defense of affirmative action policies that offers a more nuanced understanding of how centuries of invidious racism, discrimination, and segregation in the United States led to and justifies such policies from both a moral and constitutional perspective.

In A Legacy of Discrimination, leading constitutional scholars Lee C. Bollinger and Geoffrey R. Stone trace affirmative action's history and the legal challenges it has faced over the decades. They argue that in order to fully comprehend affirmative action's original intent and impact, we must reacquaint ourselves with the era in which it arose, beginning with the most important Supreme Court decision of the twentieth century, 1954's Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas. Assessing this history, Bollinger and Stone introduce subsequent, and evolving, affirmative-action case law that had the intent and effect of constraining social, educational, and economic progress for Black people and other minority groups. They demonstrate how and why affirmative action policies stand on firm legal ground and must remain protected. Further, they explain why Americans must view affirmative action as a long-term moral commitment to secure justice, especially for Black Americans, after three and a half centuries of grave injustice that violates the most essential aspirations of our nation.


About Geoffrey R. Stone

Geoffrey R. Stone is the Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago. Mr. Stone joined the faculty in 1973, after serving as a law clerk to Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan, Jr. He is a preeminent constitutional law scholar.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Oren

the book is a short tour through the constitutional history of affirmative action in the courts. the second half of the book is more of a boiler plate call against racism, though with more succinct stats and discussion than other ones. more notable was their direct refutation of arguments against af......more