ABSTRACT

This special issue commemorates and reassesses the educational effects of the Brown decision. The articles are grounded in theories and methods of several disciplines, including law, philosophy, economics, political science, sociology, and public policy. The researchers examine the way the Court frames racial inequality and whether the proposed remedy is consistent with the institutional and legal context at the time of the ruling. In addressing these questions, the authors pay particular attention to the nature of the constitutional argument, use of social evidence in shaping judicial decisions, the political economy of policy development and implementation in addressing racial desegregation, and the ongoing challenge of ensuring equality of schooling opportunity for the increasingly diverse student population.

chapter |4 pages

Guest Editor's Preface

chapter |28 pages

Returning to Square One

From Plessy to Brown and Back to Plessy

chapter |8 pages

A Commentary

Calming Brown's Critics, Still Queasy After All these Years

chapter |10 pages

A Commentary

“Brown v. Board of Education I: A Reconsideration”

chapter |24 pages

Reconstructing Los Angeles Magnet Schools

Representations in Newspapers

chapter |14 pages

Brown v. Board of Education and the Coleman Report

Social Science Research and the Debate on Educational Equality

chapter |5 pages

Expert Report of Kent D. Syverud in Grutter v. Bollinger

Social Science Research and the Debate on Educational Equality

chapter |16 pages

Educating Culturally Diverse Learners with Exceptionalities

A Critical Analysis of the Brown Case

chapter |23 pages

Immigrants and Education in the U.S. Interior

Integrating and Segmenting Tendencies in Nashville, Tennessee