Affirmative action and racial preference : a debate
By: COHEN, Carl
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Contributor(s): STERBA, James P
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Material type: 






Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Livro Geral | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Livro Geral | 5.01C6781af (Browse shelf) | 1 | Available | 10009896 |
Section one: why race preference is wrong and bad - Carl Cohen Prologue: Wrongness and badness Part I: equality and race preference 1. Equality as a moral ideal 2. Affirmative action 3. Race preference: the transformation of affirmative action Part II: why race preference is wrong 4. Race preference is morally wrong 5. Race preference is against the law 6. Race preference violates the constitution Part: III: why race preference is bad 7. Race preference is bad for the minorities preferred 8. Race preference is bad for the universities that give preference 9. Race preference is bad for society as a whole Epilogue: The future of race preference Section two: Defending affirmative action, defending preferences - James P. Sterba 1. A legal history of affirmative action in the United States 2. A definition of affirmative action 3. A defense of outreach affirmative action 4. A defense of remedial affirmative action 5. Remedial affirmative action and the U.S supreme court 6. Racial discrimination v. sexual discrimination 7. A better standard of proof for remedial afirmative action 8. A defense of diversity affirmative action 9. Objections to affirmative action 10. Affirmative action outside the United States Section three: reply to James P. Sterba - Carl Cohen Section four: Reply to Carl Cohen Section five: comments on the supreme court decision - Carl Cohen and James P. Sterba
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