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New From Harvard Education Press:
Higher Education and the Color Line
Edited by Gary Orfield, Patricia Marin, and Catherine L. Horn
Cambridge, MA--July 08, 2005--In
the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark decisions upholding
affirmative action, Higher Education and the Color Line
outlines the agenda for achieving racial justice in higher education
in the next generation. Weaving together current research and a
discussion of overarching demographic, legal, and political issues,
this comprehensive and timely book focuses on the racial transformation
of higher education and the structural barriers that perpetuate
racial stratification at the postsecondary level.
Higher Education and the Color Line
includes chapters that outline the demographic changes in elementary,
secondary, and postsecondary education; the evolving role of law
and policy; the barriers faced by minority college students; and
the kinds of programs that best serve them. Topics addressed include:
financial aid; the role of community colleges; nontraditional paths
to postsecondary education; and the role of higher education in
social and economic mobility. Taken together, these discussions
examine the role of higher education in opening up equal opportunity
for mobility in American society—or in reinforcing the segregation
between white and nonwhite America.
Published by Harvard Education Press, Higher
Education and the Color Line is edited in part by Gary
Orfield, director and co-founder of The Civil Rights Project
at Harvard University, and funded in part by Lumina
Foundation for Education.
“Today more than ever, higher education
stands as the gateway to the kind of society we will become.
Higher Education and the Color Line is a major contribution
to contemporary debates about how that gateway should be constructed
against the backdrop of race, gender, and class in American society.”
—Lee C. Bollinger, President, Columbia University
“Inclusion is the single greatest challenge
facing colleges and universities in the United States. This is especially
true in states like California, where the so-called minority will
soon be the majority. Higher Education and the Color Line is
an incredible resource for those of us on the front lines who are
trying to ensure that our institutions serve the entire population,
not just those who by virtue of an accident of birth are among the
privileged classes.”
—Robert J. Birgeneau, Chancellor, University of California-Berkeley
Ben Kesling
bkesling@hds.harvard.edu
617-495-3432
For further information on this and other Harvard
Education Press titles, please visit our website at http://gseweb.harvard.edu/hepg.
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