August 08, 2012
“The case coming before the Supreme Court this fall, Fisher v UT Austin, provides the opportunity for the justices to reaffirm the critical importance of making opportunity available for all of our youth in order to create a stronger nation,” states Patricia Gándara, co-director of the Civil Rights Project and author of the policy brief, California: A Case Study in the Loss of Affirmative Action. “This policy report shows that that goal would be undermined by following California’s path.”
This policy brief demonstrates the continuing decline in representation of underrepresented minorities (URMs) in spite of efforts by the University of California, even as URMs have become the majority of all students in the state.
Although applications to these flagship campuses have doubled since 1995, and all groups have seen reductions in the percent of applicants offered admission, African American and Latino student admittees have been reduced by 70 to 75 percent at UCLA and UC Berkeley, compared to just 35 and 40 percent for Asian and white applicants.
This disproportionate decline reflects the inequalities in the California educational system that fails to prepare African American, Native American and Latino students for highly competitive selection processes irrespective of their intellectual ability or likelihood of succeeding in their studies.
Read the Policy Brief.