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The Constitutional Logic of Affirmative Action [Paperback]

Ronald J. Fiscus (Author), Stephen L. Wasby (Editor)

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Book Description

January 30, 1992
Few issues are as mired in rhetoric and controversy as affirmative action. This is certainly no less true now as when Ronald J. Fiscus’s The Constitutional Logic of Affirmative Action was first published in 1992. The controversy has, perhaps, become more charged over the past few years. With this compelling and rigorously reasoned argument for a constitutional rationale of affirmative action, Fiscus clarifies the moral and legal ramifications of this complex subject and presents an important view in the context of the ongoing debate.
Beginning with a distinction drawn between principles of compensatory and distributive justice, Fiscus argues that the former, although often the basis for judgments made in individual discrimination cases, cannot sufficiently justify broad programs of affirmative action. Only a theory of distributive justice, one that assumes minorities have a right to what they would have gained proportionally in a nonracist society, can persuasively provide that justification. On this basis, the author argues in favor of proportional racial quotas—and challenges the charge of “reverse discrimination” raised in protest in the name of the “innocent victims” of affirmative action—as an action necessary to approach the goals of fairness and equality.
The Constitutional Logic of Affirmative Action focuses on Supreme Court affirmative action rulings from Bakke (1976) to Croson (1989) and includes an epilogue by editor Stephen L. Wasby that considers developments through 1995. General readers concerned with racial justice, affirmative action, and public policy, as well as legal specialists and constitutional scholars will find Fiscus’s argument passionate, balanced, and persuasive.


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Review

from the foreword:
“At a time when the mere mention of quotas sends politicians of all stripes running for cover, it is remarkable to see someone looking at the crowd calmly, and making distinctions which show that, like anything else, quotas can be well used or used in ways that are unjust.”—Stanley Fish, Duke University

About the Author

Ronald J. Fiscus was Assistant Professor of Political Science at Skidmore College until his death in 1990. Stephen L. Wasby is Professor of Political Science at the State University of New York, Albany.

Ronald J. Fiscus was Assistant Professor of Political Science at Skidmore College until his death in 1990. Stephen L. Wasby is Professor of Political Science at the State University of New York, Albany.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
innocent persons argument, racially fair conditions, disproportionate quotas, constructive seniority, successful reapplication, racial proportionality, proportional quotas, nonracist society, nonminority individuals, racial fairness, proportionality argument, white firefighter, white troopers, constitutional logic, innate equality, affirmative action cases, compensatory justice, white innocence, proportionality principle
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Supreme Court, Equal Protection Clause, Fourteenth Amendment, United States, Constitutional Logic of Affirmative Action, University of California, Applying the Principles, Sheet Metal Workers, Civil Rights Act, Santa Clara County, United Steelworkers
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