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14 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L. Rev. 133 (1979)
Beyond Bakke: The Constitution and Redressing the Social History of Racism

handle is hein.journals/hcrcl14 and id is 141 raw text is: BEYOND BAKKE: THE CONSTITUTION AND
REDRESSING THE SOCIAL HISTORY
OF RACISM
Robert Allen Sedler*
The crucial constitutional issue today in the area of racial equality
is the extent to which governmental entities1 are required or permitted
to take action to redress the present consequences of the social history
of racism in this nation.2 Full redress for this history of racism would
require equalization of the societal position of blacks as a group3 with
that of whites as a group. It would mean ending white supremacy in all
of its manifestations and, in the words of Justice Marshall, achieving
genuine equality4 between blacks and whites in American society.
The effort to achieve genuine racial equality must reconcile
blacks' and whites' conflicting perceptions of the relationship between
* Professor of Law, Wayne State University. B.A. 1956, J.D. 1959, University
of Pittsburgh. The author would like to thank Bruce Baltar for his work gathering the
statistical data for the first section of this Article.
Governmental entities refers to agencies of federal, state, and local govern-
ments and to the courts.
2 See pp. 136-39 infra.
3 Although this Article focuses on blacks, the social history of racism has also
had an adverse impact on other racial-ethnic groups, such as Hispanics and Native
Americans, who, like blacks, have been subject to discrimination and victimization
because the dominant majority has perceived them as nonwhite. See, e.g., Keyes
v. School Dist. No. 1, 413 U.S. 189, 197-98 (1973) (educational opportunities of
Hispanics). For constitutional purposes, the legislature should be able to conclude that
the needs and values of governmental actions designed to provide equality for blacks
are applicable to these groups as well. See Regents of the Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke, 98
S. Ct. 2733, 2784 n.35 (1978) (Brennan, White, Marshall & Blackmun, JJ.). It should
be noted that Justice Powell's discussion in Bakke of the difficulty in determining
which groups should receive preference, id. at 2751-53 (Powell, J.), was in the
context of holding that the use of race-conscious criteria favoring minorities was
subject to strict scrutiny; Justice Powell did not indicate that the legislature was
precluded from assimilating other nonwhite groups to blacks for purposes involving
the use of race-conscious criteria. More detailed discussion of the use of racial criteria
to favor other racial-ethnic groups, however, is beyond the scope of this Article.
4 98 S. Ct. at 2804 (Marshall, J.).

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