MR. JUSTICE POWELL announced the judgment of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE STEWART, and MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST join, concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting in part.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE concurring in the judgment
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, MR. JUSTICE WHITE, MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL, and MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting in part.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN. concurring in
the judgment
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL. concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting in part.
I agree with the judgment of the Court only
insofar as it permits a university to consider the race of an
applicant in making admissions decisions. I do not agree that
petitioner's admissions program violates the Constitution. For
it must be remembered that, during most of the past 200 years,
the Constitution as interpreted by this Court did not prohibit
the most ingenious and pervasive forms of discrimination against
the Negro. Now, when a State acts to remedy the effects of that
legacy of discrimination, I cannot believe that this same Constitution
stands as a barrier.
I
A
Three hundred and fifty years ago, the Negro
was dragged to this country in chains to be sold into slavery.
Uprooted from his homeland and thrust into bondage for forced
labor, the slave was deprived of all legal rights. It was unlawful
to teach him to read; he could be sold away from his family and
friends at the whim of his master; and killing or maiming him
was not a crime. The system of slavery brutalized and dehumanized
both master and slave. 1
The denial of human rights was etched into
the American Colonies' first attempts at establishing self-government.
When the colonists determined to seek their independence from
England, they drafted a unique document cataloguing their grievances
against the King and proclaiming as "self-evident" that
"all men are created equal" and are endowed "with
certain unalienable Rights," including those to "Life,
Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." The self-evident truths
and the unalienable rights were intended, however, to apply only
to white men. An earlier draft of the Declaration of Independence,
submitted by Thomas Jefferson to the Continental Congress, had
included among the charges against the King that
"[he] has waged cruel war against human nature itself, violating its most sacred rights of life and liberty in the persons of a distant people who never offended him, captivating and carrying them into slavery in another hemisphere, or to incur miserable death in their transportation thither." Franklin 88.
The Southern delegation insisted that the charge
be deleted; the colonists themselves were implicated in the slave
trade, and inclusion of this claim might have made it more difficult
to justify the continuation of slavery once the ties to England
were severed. Thus, even as the colonists embarked on a course
to secure their own freedom and equality, they ensured perpetuation
of the system that deprived a whole race of those rights.
The implicit protection of slavery embodied
in the Declaration of Independence was made explicit in the Constitution,
which treated a slave as being equivalent to three-fifths of a
person for purposes of apportioning representatives and taxes
among the States. Art. I, § 2. The Constitution also contained
a clause ensuring that the "Migration or Importation"
of slaves into the existing States would be legal until at least
1808, Art. I, § 9, and a fugitive slave clause requiring
that when a slave escaped to another State, he must be returned
on the claim of the master, Art. IV, § 2. In their declaration
of the principles that were to provide the cornerstone of the
new Nation, therefore, the Framers made it plain that "we
the people," for whose protection the Constitution was designed,
did not include those whose skins were the wrong color. As Professor
John Hope Franklin has observed, Americans "proudly accepted
the challenge and responsibility of their new political freedom
by establishing the machinery and safeguards that insured the
continued enslavement of blacks." Franklin 100.
The individual States likewise established
the machinery to protect the system of slavery through the promulgation
of the Slave Codes, which were designed primarily to defend the
property interest of the owner in his slave. The position of the
Negro slave as mere property was confirmed by this Court in Dred
Scott v. Sandford, 19 How. 393 (1857), holding that the Missouri
Compromise -- which prohibited slavery in the portion of the Louisiana
Purchase Territory north of Missouri -- was unconstitutional because
it deprived slave owners of their property without due process.
The Court declared that under the Constitution a slave was property,
and "[the] right to traffic in it, like an ordinary article
of merchandise and property, was guarantied to the citizens of
the United States . . . ." Id., at 451. The Court further
concluded that Negroes were not intended to be included as citizens
under the Constitution but were "regarded as beings of an
inferior order . . . altogether unfit to associate with the white
race, either in social or political relations; and so far inferior,
that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect
. . . ." Id., at 407.
B
The status of the Negro as property was officially
erased by his emancipation at the end of the Civil War. But the
long-awaited emancipation, while freeing the Negro from slavery,
did not bring him citizenship or equality in any meaningful way.
Slavery was replaced by a system of "laws which imposed upon
the colored race onerous disabilities and burdens, and curtailed
their rights in the pursuit of life, liberty, and property to
such an extent that their freedom was of little value." Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36, 70 (1873). Despite the passage of the Thirteenth,
Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments, the Negro was systematically
denied the rights those Amendments were supposed to secure. The
combined actions and inactions of the State and Federal Governments
maintained Negroes in a position of legal inferiority for another
century after the Civil War.
The Southern States took the first steps to
re-enslave the Negroes. Immediately following the end of the Civil
War, many of the provisional legislatures passed Black Codes,
similar to the Slave Codes, which, among other things, limited
the rights of Negroes to own or rent property and permitted imprisonment
for breach of employment contracts. Over the next several decades,
the South managed to disenfranchise the Negroes in spite of the
Fifteenth Amendment by various techniques, including poll taxes,
deliberately complicated balloting processes, property and literacy
qualifications, and finally the white primary.
Congress responded to the legal disabilities
being imposed in the Southern States by passing the Reconstruction
Acts and the Civil Rights Acts. Congress also responded to the
needs of the Negroes at the end of the Civil War by establishing
the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, better
known as the Freedmen's Bureau, to supply food, hospitals, land,
and education to the newly freed slaves. Thus, for a time it seemed
as if the Negro might be protected from the continued denial of
his civil rights and might be relieved of the disabilities that
prevented him from taking his place as a free and equal citizen.
That time, however, was short-lived. Reconstruction
came to a close, and, with the assistance of this Court, the Negro
was rapidly stripped of his new civil rights. In the words of
C. Vann Woodward: "By narrow and ingenious interpretation
[the Supreme Court's] decisions over a period of years had whittled
away a great part of the authority presumably given the government
for protection of civil rights." Woodward 139.
The Court began by interpreting the Civil War
Amendments in a manner that sharply curtailed their substantive
protections. See, e. g., Slaughter-House Cases, supra; United
States v. Reese, 92 U.S. 214 (1876); United States v. Cruikshank,
92 U.S. 542 (1876). Then in the notorious Civil Rights Cases,
109 U.S. 3 (1883), the Court strangled Congress' efforts to use
its power to promote racial equality. In those cases the Court
invalidated sections of the Civil Rights Act of 1875 that made
it a crime to deny equal access to "inns, public conveyances,
theatres and other places of public amusement." Id., at 10.
According to the Court, the Fourteenth Amendment gave Congress
the power to proscribe only discriminatory action by the State.
The Court ruled that the Negroes who were excluded from public
places suffered only an invasion of their social rights at the
hands of private individuals, and Congress had no power to remedy
that. Id., at 24-25. "When a man has emerged from slavery,
and by the aid of beneficent legislation has shaken off the inseparable
concomitants of that state," the Court concluded, "there
must be some stage in the progress of his elevation when he takes
the rank of a mere citizen, and ceases to be the special favorite
of the laws . . . ." Id., at 25. As Mr.
Justice Harlan noted in dissent, however, the
Civil War Amendments and Civil Rights Acts did not make the Negroes
the "special favorite" of the laws but instead "sought
to accomplish in reference to that race . . . -- what had already
been done in every State of the Union for the white race -- to
secure and protect rights belonging to them as freemen and citizens;
nothing more." Id., at 61.
The Court's ultimate blow to the Civil War
Amendments and to the equality of Negroes came in Plessy v. Ferguson,
163 U.S. 537 (1896). In upholding a Louisiana law that required
railway companies to provide "equal but separate" accommodations
for whites and Negroes, the Court held that the Fourteenth Amendment
was not intended "to abolish distinctions based upon color,
or to enforce social, as distinguished from political equality,
or a commingling of the two races upon terms unsatisfactory to
either." Id., at 544. Ignoring totally the realities of the
positions of the two races, the Court remarked:
"We consider the underlying fallacy of the plaintiff's argument to consist in the assumption that the enforced separation of the two races stamps the colored race with a badge of inferiority. If this be so, it is not by reason of anything found in the act, but solely because the colored race chooses to put that construction upon it." Id., at 551.
Mr. Justice Harlan's dissenting opinion recognized
the bankruptcy of the Court's reasoning. He noted that the "real
meaning" of the legislation was "that colored citizens
are so inferior and degraded that they cannot be allowed to sit
in public coaches occupied by white citizens." Id., at 560.
He expressed his fear that if like laws were enacted in other
States, "the effect would be in the highest degree mischievous."
Id., at 563. Although slavery would have disappeared, the States
would retain the power "to interfere with the full enjoyment
of the blessings of freedom; to regulate civil rights, common
to all citizens, upon the basis of race; and to place in a condition
of legal inferiority a large body of American citizens . . . ."
Ibid.
The fears of Mr. Justice Harlan were soon to
be realized. In the wake of Plessy, many States expanded their
Jim Crow laws, which had up until that time been limited primarily
to passenger trains and schools. The segregation of the races
was extended to residential areas, parks, hospitals, theaters,
waiting rooms, and bathrooms. There were even statutes and ordinances
which authorized separate phone booths for Negroes and whites,
which required that textbooks used by children of one race be
kept separate from those used by the other, and which required
that Negro and white prostitutes be kept in separate districts.
In 1898, after Plessy, the Charlestown News and Courier printed
a parody of Jim Crow laws:
"'If there must be Jim Crow cars on the railroads, there should be Jim Crow cars on the street railways. Also on all passenger boats. . . . If there are to be Jim Crow cars, moreover, there should be Jim Crow waiting saloons at all stations, and Jim Crow eating houses. . . . There should be Jim Crow sections of the jury box, and a separate Jim Crow dock and witness stand in every court -- and a Jim Crow Bible for colored witnesses to kiss.'" Woodward 68.
The irony is that before many years had passed,
with the exception of the Jim Crow witness stand, "all the
improbable applications of the principle suggested by the editor
in derision had been put into practice -- down to and including
the Jim Crow Bible." Id., at 69.
Nor were the laws restricting the rights of
Negroes limited solely to the Southern States. In many of the
Northern States, the Negro was denied the right to vote, prevented
from serving on juries, and excluded from theaters, restaurants,
hotels, and inns. Under President Wilson, the Federal Government
began to require segregation in Government buildings; desks of
Negro employees were curtained off; separate bathrooms and separate
tables in the cafeterias were provided; and even the galleries
of the Congress were segregated. When his segregationist policies
were attacked, President Wilson responded that segregation was
"'not humiliating but a benefit'" and that he was "'rendering
[the Negroes] more safe in their possession of office and less
likely to be discriminated against.'" Kluger 91.
The enforced segregation of the races continued
into the middle of the 20th century. In both World Wars, Negroes
were for the most part confined to separate military units; it
was not until 1948 that an end to segregation in the military
was ordered by President Truman. And the history of the exclusion
of Negro children from white public schools is too well known
and recent to require repeating here. That Negroes were deliberately
excluded from public graduate and professional schools -- and
thereby denied the opportunity to become doctors, lawyers, engineers,
and the like -- is also well established. It is of course true
that some of the Jim Crow laws (which the decisions of this Court
had helped to foster) were struck down by this Court in a series
of decisions leading up to Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S.
483 (1954). See, e. g., Morgan v. Virginia, 328 U.S. 373 (1946);
Sweatt v. Painter, 339 U.S. 629 (1950); McLaurin v. Oklahoma State
Regents, 339 U.S. 637 (1950). Those decisions, however, did not
automatically end segregation, nor did they move Negroes from
a position of legal inferiority to one of equality. The legacy
of years of slavery and of years of second-class citizenship in
the wake of emancipation could not be so easily eliminated.
II
The position of the Negro today in America
is the tragic but inevitable consequence of centuries of unequal
treatment. Measured by any benchmark of comfort or achievement,
meaningful equality remains a distant dream for the Negro.
A Negro child today has a life expectancy which
is shorter by more than five years than that of a white child.
2 The Negro child's mother
is over three times more likely to die of complications in childbirth,
3 and the infant mortality
rate for Negroes is nearly twice that for whites. 4
The median income of the Negro family is only 60% that of the
median of a white family, 5
and the percentage of Negroes who live in families with incomes
below the poverty line is nearly four times greater than that
of whites. 6
When the Negro child reaches working age, he
finds that America offers him significantly less than it offers
his white counterpart. For Negro adults, the unemployment rate
is twice that of whites, 7
and the unemployment rate for Negro teenagers is nearly three
times that of white teenagers. 8
A Negro male who completes four years of college can expect a
median annual income of merely $ 110 more than a white male who
has only a high school diploma. 9
Although Negroes represent 11.5% of the population, 10
they are only 1.2% of the lawyers and judges, 2% of the physicians,
2.3% of the dentists, 1.1% of the engineers and 2.6% of the college
and university professors. 11
The relationship between those figures and
the history of unequal treatment afforded to the Negro cannot
be denied. At every point from birth to death the impact of the
past is reflected in the still disfavored position of the Negro.
In light of the sorry history of discrimination
and its devastating impact on the lives of Negroes, bringing the
Negro into the mainstream of American life should be a state interest
of the highest order. To fail to do so is to ensure that America
will forever remain a divided society.
III
I do not believe that the Fourteenth Amendment
requires us to accept that fate. Neither its history nor our past
cases lend any support to the conclusion that a university may
not remedy the cumulative effects of society's discrimination
by giving consideration to race in an effort to increase the number
and percentage of Negro doctors.
A
This Court long ago remarked that
"in any fair and just construction of any section or phrase of these [Civil War] amendments, it is necessary to look to the purpose which we have said was the pervading spirit of them all, the evil which they were designed to remedy . . . ." Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall., at 72.
It is plain that the Fourteenth Amendment was
not intended to prohibit measures designed to remedy the effects
of the Nation's past treatment of Negroes. The Congress that passed
the Fourteenth Amendment is the same Congress that passed the
1866 Freedmen's Bureau Act, an Act that provided many of its benefits
only to Negroes. Act of July 16, 1866, ch. 200, 14 Stat. 173;
see supra, at 391. Although the Freedmen's Bureau legislation
provided aid for refugees, thereby including white persons within
some of the relief measures, 14 Stat. 174; see also Act of Mar.
3, 1865, ch. 90, 13 Stat. 507, the bill was regarded, to the dismay
of many Congressmen, as "solely and entirely for the freedmen,
and to the exclusion of all other persons . . . ." Cong.
Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., 544 (1866) (remarks of Rep. Taylor).
See also id., at 634-635 (remarks of Rep. Ritter); id., at App.
78, 80-81 (remarks of Rep. Chanler). Indeed, the bill was bitterly
opposed on the ground that it "undertakes to make the negro
in some respects . . . superior . . . and gives them favors that
the poor white boy in the North cannot get." Id., at 401
(remarks of Sen. McDougall). See also id., at 319 (remarks of
Sen. Hendricks); id., at 362 (remarks of Sen. Saulsbury); id.,
at 397 (remarks of Sen. Willey); id., at 544 (remarks of Rep.
Taylor). The bill's supporters defended it -- not by rebutting
the claim of special treatment -- but by pointing to the need
for such treatment:
"The very discrimination it makes between 'destitute and suffering' negroes, and destitute and suffering white paupers, proceeds upon the distinction that, in the omitted case, civil rights and immunities are already sufficiently protected by the possession of political power, the absence of which in the case provided for necessitates governmental protection." Id., at App. 75 (remarks of Rep. Phelps).
Despite the objection to the special treatment
the bill would provide for Negroes, it was passed by Congress.
Id., at 421, 688. President Johnson vetoed this bill and also
a subsequent bill that contained some modifications; one of his
principal objections to both bills was that they gave special
benefits to Negroes. 8 Messages and Papers of the Presidents 3596,
3599, 3620, 3623 (1897). Rejecting the concerns of the President
and the bill's opponents, Congress overrode the President's second
veto. Cong.
Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., 3842, 3850 (1866).
Since the Congress that considered and rejected
the objections to the 1866 Freedmen's Bureau Act concerning special
relief to Negroes also proposed the Fourteenth Amendment, it is
inconceivable that the Fourteenth Amendment was intended to prohibit
all race-conscious relief measures. It "would be a distortion
of the policy manifested in that amendment, which was adopted
to prevent state legislation designed to perpetuate discrimination
on the basis of race or color," Railway Mail Assn. v. Corsi,
326 U.S. 88, 94 (1945), to hold that it barred state action to
remedy the effects of that discrimination. Such a result would
pervert the intent of the Framers by substituting abstract equality
for the genuine equality the Amendment was intended to achieve.
B
As has been demonstrated in our joint opinion,
this Court's past cases establish the constitutionality of race-conscious
remedial measures. Beginning with the school desegregation cases,
we recognized that even absent a judicial or legislative finding
of constitutional violation, a school board constitutionally could
consider the race of students in making school-assignment decisions.
See Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, 402 U.S.
1, 16 (1971); McDaniel v. Barresi, 402 U.S. 39, 41 (1971). We
noted, moreover, that a
"flat prohibition against assignment of students for the purpose of creating a racial balance must inevitably conflict with the duty of school authorities to disestablish dual school systems. As we have held in Swann, the Constitution does not compel any particular degree of racial balance or mixing, but when past and continuing constitutional violations are found, some ratios are likely to be useful as starting points in shaping a remedy. An absolute prohibition against use of such a device -- even as a starting point -- contravenes the implicit command of Green v. County School Board, 391 U.S. 430 (1968), that all reasonable methods be available to formulate an effective remedy." Board of Education v. Swann, 402 U.S. 43, 46 (1971).
As we have observed, "[any] other approach
would freeze the status quo that is the very target of all desegregation
processes." McDaniel v. Barresi, supra, at 41.
Only last Term, in United Jewish Organizations
v. Carey, 430 U.S. 144 (1977), we upheld a New York reapportionment
plan that was deliberately drawn on the basis of race to enhance
the electoral power of Negroes and Puerto Ricans; the plan had
the effect of diluting the electoral strength of the Hasidic Jewish
community. We were willing in UJO to sanction the remedial use
of a racial classification even though it disadvantaged otherwise
"innocent" individuals. In another case last Term, Califano
v. Webster, 430 U.S. 313 (1977), the Court upheld a provision
in the Social Security laws that discriminated against men because
its purpose was "'the permissible one of redressing our society's
longstanding disparate treatment of women.'" Id., at 317,
quoting Califano v. Goldfarb, 430 U.S. 199, 209 n. 8 (1977) (plurality
opinion). We thus recognized the permissibility of remedying past
societal discrimination through the use of otherwise disfavored
classifications.
Nothing in those cases suggests that a university
cannot similarly act to remedy past discrimination. 12
It is true that in both UJO and Webster the use of the disfavored
classification was predicated on legislative or administrative
action, but in neither case had those bodies made findings that
there had been constitutional violations or that the specific
individuals to be benefited had actually been the victims of discrimination.
Rather, the classification in each of those cases was based on
a determination that the group was in need of the remedy because
of some type of past discrimination. There is thus ample support
for the conclusion that a university can employ race-conscious
measures to remedy past societal discrimination, without the need
for a finding that those benefited were actually victims of that
discrimination.
IV
While I applaud the judgment of the Court that
a university may consider race in its admissions process, it is
more than a little ironic that, after several hundred years of
class-based discrimination against Negroes, the Court is unwilling
to hold that a class-based remedy for that discrimination is permissible.
In declining to so hold, today's judgment ignores the fact that
for several hundred years Negroes have been discriminated against,
not as individuals, but rather solely because of the color of
their skins. It is unnecessary in 20th-century America to have
individual Negroes demonstrate that they have been victims of
racial discrimination; the racism of our society has been so pervasive
that none, regardless of wealth or position, has managed to escape
its impact. The experience of Negroes in America has been different
in kind, not just in degree, from that of other ethnic groups.
It is not merely the history of slavery alone but also that a
whole people were marked as inferior by the law. And that mark
has endured. The dream of America as the great melting pot has
not been realized for the Negro; because of his skin color he
never even made it into the pot.
These differences in the experience of the
Negro make it difficult for me to accept that Negroes cannot be
afforded greater protection under the Fourteenth Amendment where
it is necessary to remedy the effects of past discrimination.
In the Civil Rights Cases, supra, the Court wrote that the Negro
emerging from slavery must cease "to be the special favorite
of the laws." 109 U.S., at 25; see supra, at 392. We cannot
in light of the history of the last century yield to that view.
Had the Court in that decision and others been willing to "do
for human liberty and the fundamental rights of American citizenship,
what it did . . . for the protection of slavery and the rights
of the masters of fugitive slaves," 109 U.S., at 53 (Harlan,
J., dissenting), we would not need now to permit the recognition
of any "special wards."
Most importantly, had the Court been willing
in 1896, in Plessy v. Ferguson, to hold that the Equal Protection
Clause forbids differences in treatment based on race, we would
not be faced with this dilemma in 1978. We must remember, however,
that the principle that the "Constitution is colorblind"
appeared only in the opinion of the lone dissenter. 163 U.S.,
at 559. The majority of the Court rejected the principle of color
blindness, and for the next 60 years, from Plessy to Brown v.
Board of Education, ours was a Nation where, by law, an individual
could be given "special" treatment based on the color
of his skin.
It is because of a legacy of unequal treatment
that we now must permit the institutions of this society to give
consideration to race in making decisions about who will hold
the positions of influence, affluence, and prestige in America.
For far too long, the doors to those positions have been shut
to Negroes. If we are ever to become a fully integrated society,
one in which the color of a person's skin will not determine the
opportunities available to him or her, we must be willing to take
steps to open those doors. I do not believe that anyone can truly
look into America's past and still find that a remedy for the
effects of that past is impermissible.
It has been said that this case involves only
the individual, Bakke, and this University. I doubt, however,
that there is a computer capable of determining the number of
persons and institutions that may be affected by the decision
in this case. For example, we are told by the Attorney General
of the United States that at least 27 federal agencies have adopted
regulations requiring recipients of federal funds to take "'affirmative
action to overcome the effects of conditions which resulted in
limiting participation . . . by persons of a particular race,
color, or national origin.'" Supplemental Brief for United
States as Amicus Curiae 16 (emphasis added). I cannot even guess
the number of state and local governments that have set up affirmative-action
programs, which may be affected by today's decision.
I fear that we have come full circle. After the Civil War our Government started several "affirmative action" programs. This Court in the Civil Rights Cases and Plessy v. Ferguson destroyed the movement toward complete equality. For almost a century no action was taken, and this nonaction was with the tacit approval of the courts. Then we had Brown v. Board of Education and the Civil Rights Acts of Congress, followed by numerous affirmative-action programs. Now, we have this Court again stepping in, this time to stop affirmative-action programs of the type used by the University of California.
---- Begin EndNotes ----
1 The history
recounted here is perhaps too well known to require documentation.
But I must acknowledge the authorities on which I rely in retelling
it. J. Franklin, From Slavery to Freedom (4th ed. 1974) (hereinafter
Franklin); R. Kluger, Simple Justice (1975) (hereinafter Kluger);
C. Woodward, The Strange Career of Jim Crow (3d ed. 1974) (hereinafter
Woodward).
2 U.S. Dept.
of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the
United States 65 (1977) (Table 94).
3 Id., at
70 (Table 102).
4 Ibid.
5 U.S. Dept.
of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Current Population Reports,
Series P-60, No. 107, p. 7 (1977) (Table 1).
6 Id., at
20 (Table 14).
7 U.S. Dept.
of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment and Earnings,
January 1978, p. 170 (Table 44).
8 Ibid.
9 U. S.
Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Current Population Reports,
Series P-60, No. 105, p. 198 (1977) (Table 47).
10 U.S.
Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract,
supra, at 25 (Table 24).
11 Id.,
at 407-408 (Table 662) (based on 1970 census).
12 Indeed,
the action of the University finds support in the regulations
promulgated under Title VI by the Department of Health, Education,
and Welfare and approved by the President, which authorize a federally
funded institution to take affirmative steps to overcome past
discrimination against groups even where the institution was not
guilty of prior discrimination. 45 CFR § 80.3 (b)(6)(ii)
(1977).
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
© 1995 - 2009, Touro Law Center