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31 UCLA L. Rev. 128 (1983-1984)
Can Science Be Inopportune - Constitutional Validity of Governmental Restrictions on Race-IQ Research

handle is hein.journals/uclalr31 and id is 144 raw text is: CAN SCIENCE BE INOPPORTUNE?
CONSTITUTIONAL VALIDITY OF
GOVERNMENTAL RESTRICTIONS
ON RACE-IQ RESEARCH
Richard Delgado,* Sean Bradley,**
David Burkenroad,** Ron Chavez,**
Bruce Doering,*** Eric Lardiere,**
Robert Reeves,** Mark S. Smith,***
John Windhausen***
INTRODUCTION
Fifteen years ago, an article about legal constraints on scien-
tific inquiry would have been a most unlikely enterprise. From
the nation's inception in a period of enlightenment, optimism, and
faith in science, to the mid-1960's, science enjoyed widespread
public support and esteem.' The nation welcomed the advances
in health, safety, and comfort ushered in by developments in fields
such as medicine, chemistry, and geology, while our imaginations
were captured by discoveries in space, atomic theory, and flight.
The first nuclear explosion at Alamogordo gave some pause, but
the atom seemed a single genie let out of a single bottle. If the
genie could not be put back in, perhaps it could be tamed, or at
least kept quiet.
* Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law. J.D., 1974, University of Califor-
nia, Berkeley.
** UCLA School of Law, Class of 1983.
*** UCLA School of Law, Class of 1984.
We gratefully acknowledge the encouragement and ideas of Robert Sinsheimer
and the assistance of Richard Dennis and Candace Hellstrom in the preparation of
this manuscript.
1. E.g., B. HINDLE, THE PURSUIT OF SCIENCE IN REVOLUTIONARY AMERICA
1735-1789, at 381-92 (1956); T. JEFFERSON, NOTES ON THE STATE OF VIRGINIA
(1801); D. PRICE, THE SCIENTIFIC ESTATE (1965) (continuing prestige and influence
of science); Delgado & Millen, God, Galileo and Government: Toward Constitutional
Protectionfor Scientoc Inquiry, 53 WASH. L. REV. 349, 354-61 (1978) (early faith in
science).

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