"Affirmative Action" and Equal Protection in Higher Education (CRS Report for Congress)
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Release Date |
Jan. 31, 2019 |
Report Number |
R45481 |
Report Type |
Report |
Authors |
Christine J. Back; JD S. Hsin |
Source Agency |
Congressional Research Service |
Summary:
When federal courts have analyzed and addressed “affirmative action” in higher education, they
have done so in two distinct but related senses, both under the Fourteenth Amendment’s
guarantee of “equal protection.”
The first has its roots in the original sense of “affirmative action:” the mandatory use of race by
public education systems to eliminate the remnants of state-imposed racial segregation. Because
state-sanctioned race segregation in public education violates the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal
Protection Clause, in certain cases involving a state’s formerly de jure segregated public
university system, a state’s consideration of race in its higher education policies and practices may be an affirmative
obligation. As the U.S. Supreme Court explained in its consequential 1992 decision United States v. Fordice, equal
protection may require states that formerly maintained de jure segregated university systems to consider race for the purpose
of eliminating all vestiges of their prior “dual” systems. Drawing upon its precedent addressing racially segregated public
schools in the K-12 context, the Court established a three-part legal standard in Fordice for evaluating the sufficiency and
effectiveness of a state’s efforts in “dismantl[ing]” its formerly de jure segregated public university system. To that remedial
end, mandatory race-conscious measures—in this de jure context—are not limited to admissions. Instead, remedies may also
address policies and practices relating to academic programs, institutional missions, funding, and other aspects of public
university operations.
Outside this de jure context, “affirmative action” has come to refer to a different category of race-conscious policies. These
involve what the Court at one time called the “benign” use of racial classifications—voluntary measures designed not to
remedy past de jure discrimination, but to help racial minorities overcome the effects of their earlier exclusion. And for
institutions of higher education, the Court has addressed one type of affirmative action policy in particular: the use of race as
a factor in admissions decisions, a practice now widely observed by both public and private colleges and universities.
The federal courts have come to subject these voluntary race-conscious policies—“affirmative action” in its perhaps more
familiar sense—to a particularly searching form of review known as strict scrutiny. And even though this heightened judicial
scrutiny has long been regarded as strict in theory but fatal in fact, the Court’s review of race-conscious admissions policies
in higher education has proved a notable exception, with the Court having twice upheld universities’ use of race as one of
many factors considered when assembling their incoming classes. The Court has long grappled with this seeming tension—
between the strictness of its scrutiny and its approval of race-conscious admissions policies—beginning with its landmark
1978 decision in Regents of the University of California v. Bakke through its 2016 decision in Fisher v. University of Texas.
Though the Equal Protection Clause generally concerns public universities and their constitutional obligations under the
Fourteenth Amendment, federal statutory law also plays a role in ensuring equal protection in higher education. To that end,
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits recipients of federal funding—including private colleges and universities—
from, at a minimum, discriminating against students and applicants in a manner that would violate the Equal Protection
Clause. Federal agencies, including the Departments of Justice and Education, investigate and administratively enforce
institutions’ compliance with Title VI.