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Past Event

Progress and Prospects

Affirmative Action Under Fire

Race, Ethnicity

Event Summary

  • Is affirmative action essential for promoting opportunity and fairness for all Americans?
  • Is affirmative action a deeply problematic, divisive, discriminatory and possibly ineffective detour along the road to real equality in America?

Event Information

When

Monday, May 04, 1998
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave, N.W.
Washington, DC 20036
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

Email: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

As the nation continues to debate its racial past and future, the phrase "affirmative action" endures as a magnet for rancor and confusion. Brookings convenes a panel of leading experts to discuss affirmative action in the different but closely-related and crucially important realms of education and employment.

This briefing is part of a focus on race which is featured in the spring 1998 issue of the Brookings Review entitled Black America: Progress and Prospects which includes timely and provocative contributions by nationally prominent scholars (including Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Abigail and Stephan Thernstrom, Orlando Patterson, Christopher Jenks, and Glenn Loury) who assess various aspects of "the black predicament" from diverse perspectives.

Participants

Moderator

Christopher H. Foreman, Jr.

Nonresident Senior Fellow, Governance Studies

Panelists include

Abigail Thernstrom

Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute

Orlando Patterson

John Cowles Professor of Sociology, Harvard University

Thomas J. Kane

Associate Professor of Public Policy, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University


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