A riveting analysis of the struggle to eliminate affirmative action at the University of California.

Burning Down the House presents a riveting analysis of one of the most nationally prominent and bitterly contested policy battles in the history of American higher education: the struggle to eliminate affirmative action at the University of California. A timely and essential addition to the literature on affirmative action, it examines the political, economic, legal, and organizational factors that shaped the debate in California and offers unique insight into the contemporary politics of admissions policy, university governance, and the role of higher education in broader state and national political contests to come.

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Present a riveting analysis of one of the most nationally prominent and bitterly contested policy battles in the history of American higher education; the struggle to eliminate affirmative action at the University of California. It examines the political, economic, legal and organisational factors that shaped the debate.
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Figures and Tables


Acknowledgments


1. Burning Down the House: The Politics of Higher Education Policy


2. The UC Governance and Decision-Making Structure: History and Context


3. The Context Shaping the Affirmative Action Contest at UC


4. Interest Articulation and the Illusion of Control


5. The New Politics of Governance


6. National Contest and Conflict


7. Contest, Resistance, and Decision


8. Aftermath


9. The End and the Beginning


Appendix 1. SP-1 as Amended and Passed


Appendix 2. SP-2 as Amended and Passed


Notes


Bibliography


Index


List of Titles, SUNY series: Frontiers in Education

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<p><b>A riveting analysis of the struggle to eliminate affirmative action at the University of California.</b></p>

Product details

ISBN
9780791460573
Published
2004-04-08
Publisher
State University of New York Press; State University of New York Press
Weight
522 gr
Age
P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
291

Author

Biographical note

Brian Pusser is Associate Professor at the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia.