Por: ABC News Politics July 03, 2023
A majority of Americans approve of the Supreme Court ruling restricting the use of race as a factor in college admissions, though the country is more divided on other high-profile rulings and increasingly viewing the court as driven more by politics than the law, according to a new conducted using Ipsos' KnowledgePanel.On Thursday, the in cases involving whether public and private colleges and universities can continue to use race as one... + full article
New York Daily News USA Politics July 25, 2023
The federal government has launched a civil rights probe into Harvard University’s use of legacy admissions, the U.S. Department of Education said Tuesday, increasing pressure on universities already grappling with intense backlash to the practice. The disclosure arrived three... + más
Healthy Mayfield 'rolling with the punches' as QB2 | ESPN
Panthers' Baker Mayfield 'rolling with the punches' as QB2 | ABC News
New York Daily News USA Politics July 03, 2023
A Boston civil rights firm charged in a complaint on Monday that Harvard University’s preferential treatment of the children of alumni violates federal law, putting pressure on the Education Department to crack down on so-called legacy admissions at elite U.S. universities.... + más
Activists spurred by affirmative action ruling sue Harvard over legacy admissions | Los Angeles Times
Civil rights group, spurred by affirmative action ruling, sues Harvard over legacy admissions | Portland Press Herald
Newsweek USA Nation June 30, 2023
Minorities who as a whole will soon be nationally impacted by the Supreme Court's decision to strike down affirmative action in college admissions argue that legacy admissions will lead to an even wider gap between the privileged and everyone else.The decision announced... + más
Harvard’s legacy admissions come under fire in civil rights complaint in wake of Supreme Court ruling on affirmative action | New York Daily News
As high court mulls race-based admission, Asian Americans are divided | WPTV
The Boston Globe USA Opinion June 29, 2023
For many college admissions officers, the personal essays that students submit are the most resonant part of an application.While the rigor of applicants’ high school courses and their grades are typically what admissions officers consider first — especially at the most... + más
Council Post: Why We Still Need Affirmative Action, Especially In The Workplace | Forbes
Opinion | The New York Times
New York Post USA Opinion June 22, 2023
Sometime this month, the Supreme Court is expected to rule on the future of affirmative action in college admissions. A pair of lawsuits brought against Harvard University and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, by advocacy group Students for Fair Admissions, accuse... + más
WPTV USA Nation June 17, 2023
As the U.S. Supreme Court weighs affirmative action in college admissions, Helena Seo is keeping a close eye on it at her home in northern New Jersey. A rising junior at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, she supports affirmative action. “I feel like I benefited from... + más
Author readings around Boston Sept. 25-Oct. 1 | The Boston Globe
Op-Ed: Why successful Asian Americans are penalized at the workplace | Los Angeles Times
The Boston Globe USA Nation October 31, 2022
On Monday, the Supreme Court heard arguments in two cases challenging affirmative action. The likely outcome, experts said, is a nationwide ban on the consideration of race or ethnicity in college admissions.The lawsuits before the Court challenged the admissions practices of... + más
Justices’ past affirmative action views, in their own words | WPLG Local 10
About iurex | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer |