Waubonsee Community College

Even the children of strangers, equality under the U.S. Constitution, Donald W. Jackson

Label
Even the children of strangers, equality under the U.S. Constitution, Donald W. Jackson
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 253-267) and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Even the children of strangers
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
25411858
Responsibility statement
Donald W. Jackson
Sub title
equality under the U.S. Constitution
Summary
In this book Donald Jackson unravels the complex meanings of equal protection doctrine and its various interpretations over the last 134 years. He explores the conceptual basis for a variety of "pecking orders" (or discriminations) - most notably race and sex, but also wealth, occupation, and education - that have been used to justify special privilege, status, or rewards. He also examines the tensions between equal protection and American individualism, offering possible ways to resolve apparently intractable conflicts between individualism and affirmative action policies. Jackson argues that an assumption of human equality is always appropriate and that the burden of proof should be on those who want to justify treating people differently, for whatever reason. Our long-standing difficulty, he contends, has not been with the principle of equality but with the inferior reasons we have accepted for deviating from that principle. Deliberately cast for the general reader, this study should widen the public understanding of equality and raise the level of the debates that surround it
Table Of Contents
Understanding key concepts of equality -- Reconstruction and equal protection -- Early interpretations of equal protection -- Laissez-faire and economic equal protection -- The path to Brown v. Board of Education -- Segregation and desegregation : the consequences of Brown -- Integration, busing, and group-regarding equality -- Affirmative action programs in higher education and employment -- Equal protection and sex discrimination -- Breaking new ground for categorical discrimination -- Equality from a multinational perspective -- Conclusion : equality for future reference
Content
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