The Origins of Affirmative Action

Matthew Johnson
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Abstract

This chapter examines the origins of affirmative action in the University of Michigan (UM). The pressure that led to the university's first undergraduate affirmative action admissions program came from a federal bureaucrat and the president of the United States, who were both responding to black activism for workplace justice. Yet this pressure never threatened UM with the loss of lucrative federal contracts or potential court cases. UM adopted affirmative action in 1964 because people at the top of the institution wanted the university to change. This environment of weak federal coercion created a perfect recipe for co-optation. After the initial dose of federal pressure, UM officials took control of the purpose and character of affirmative action, creating a program that preserved the university's long-established priorities and values. It is no surprise, then, that between 1964 and 1967, black enrollment rose from only 0.5 to 1.65 percent of the student body. However, given that African Americans constituted more than 10 percent of the state population, affirmative action made a small dent in the racial disparities at UM.
平权法案的起源
本章探讨了密歇根大学平权法案的起源。导致该大学推出首个本科生平权行动招生项目的压力来自一名联邦官员和美国总统,他们都是在回应黑人争取工作场所正义的行动主义。然而,这种压力从未威胁到UM失去利润丰厚的联邦合同或潜在的法庭诉讼。密歇根大学在1964年通过了平权法案,因为该校高层希望大学做出改变。这种联邦政府强制不力的环境,为合作创造了一个完美的配方。在最初的联邦压力下,UM官员控制了平权行动的目的和性质,创建了一个保留大学长期确立的优先事项和价值观的项目。因此,在1964年至1967年间,黑人入学率从仅占学生总数的0.5%上升到1.65%也就不足为奇了。然而,考虑到非裔美国人占该州人口的10%以上,平权法案对UM的种族差异起到了很小的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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