ABSTRACT

This book provides detailed analysis of Supreme Court judgments which have impacted the rights of minorities in relation to higher education, and so illustrates ongoing issues of racial discrimination throughout the American education sector.

Race, Law, and Higher Education in the Colorblind Era brings together the many racial disputes that have been adjudicated by the Supreme Court to investigate the politics of colorblindness in the post-civil rights era. Through a reading of these various cases as a form of continuing racial discourse, this book focuses on the ways in which racial disputes operate within a clearly entwined colorblind narrative that invalidates racial justice for minorities. By investigating how the Supreme Court has understood racism and the concept of race across its history, this volume demonstrates how colleges and universities must navigate the often contradictory and perilous landscape of ‘diversity’ in attempts to integrate historically disadvantaged minorities.

This book will be of interest to researchers, academics, and postgraduate students in the fields of sociology of education, multicultural education, and legal education.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

section Section I|44 pages

Foundations of Colorblindness, Whiteness, and Racial Subordination

chapter 2|12 pages

Commitments

Of Methods and Interpretation

chapter 3|20 pages

A Historical Synergy

Law, Whiteness, and the Hegemony of Racial Subordination

section Section II|49 pages

Revisiting and Revising ‘Settled’ History

section Section III|45 pages

Critical Contemporary Perspectives

chapter 7|18 pages

After Fisher v. University of Texas

Racial Justice or Whiteness Rising?

chapter 9|8 pages

Future Directions