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An Untold Story: The Widespread Benefits of Affirmative Action
- Like most Americans, the beneficiaries of affirmative action do not realize the scope and breadth of these policies or that such polices are currently under assault. Throughout the nation there are countless programs designed to address the specific challenges that many communities of color face in the quest for the American Dream. Because many Americans are running on lanes that are littered with obstacles and impassable barriers, there are programs that are designed to remove or ameliorate the effects of these obstacles.
- In Michigan, the beneficiaries of race and gender conscious affirmative action programs encompass a wide range of communities. Many groups, including white women, Arab Americans, Asian Americans, Latino Americans and Native Americans heavily rely on affirmative action programs in the areas of K-12 education, college and university admissions and financial aid, employment and contracting. With the passage of Proposal 2, all these groups stand to be hurt.
- The range of programs that will likely be eliminated by Proposal 2 demonstrates the broad swath of communities that affirmative action serves. It is important to note that in California, after the passage of Proposition 209 (which ended affirmative action in California), it was not just college admission procedures that were affected. Opponents of race and gender-conscious programs used Proposition 209 to challenge everything from outreach programs to breast cancer screenings and battered women’s shelters as mentioned above, claiming that excluding men was a form of affirmative action and therefore illegal.
- Let’s look at a list of some of the communities in Michigan that benefit from affirmative action.
- Arab Americans benefit tremendously from affirmative action programs.
- Many universities actively recruit Arab American students. Schools like Wayne State University and the University of Michigan-Dearborn, consider Arab Americans a separate ethnicity group in the area of admissions. There are a variety of university scholarships and financial aid programs tailored for Arab American students. Publicly funded English-as-a-Second Language (ESL) programs for Arab American students help both the Arab American community and the Michigan community at large.
- Asian Pacific Americans also benefit tremendously from affirmative action programs:
- The Small Business Administration’s Section 8(a) program has greatly benefited Asian American-owned businesses. The Wall Street Journal estimates that affirmative action helped Asian American-owned businesses more than double their share of contracts in a ten-year period, going from 10.5 percent of contracts in 1986 to 23.7 percent of contracts in 1996. (Sharpe, Rochelle, “Asian-Americans Gain Sharply in Big Program of Affirmative Action”. The Wall Street Journal, September 9, 1997)
- *Beyond Self Interest: Asian Pacific Americans Toward a Community of Justice, A Policy Analysis of Affirmative Action Gabriel J. Chin, Sumi Cho, Jerry Kang & Frank Wu 4 UCLA Asian Pac. Am. L.J. 129, 155
- Latina/o Americans also benefit tremendously from affirmative action programs:
- Universities and colleges use race-conscious admissions and recruitment strategies to encourage the fair representation of Latino students. When affirmative action is taken away,recruitment and outreach become illegal, and Latino enrollment suffers: At UC-Berkeley, Latino student enrollment fell from 14.5% in 1997 to 7.5% in 1998, the first year Proposition 209 went into effect.
- Publicly funded English-as-a-Second Language (ESL) programs for Latino students help both the Latino community and Michigan at large.
- Native Americans also benefit tremendously from affirmative action programs:
- Affirmative action allows colleges and universities to reach out to Native Americans, an historically neglected community. Due to national recruiting and outreach efforts between 1980-2001 , American Indian enrollment in institutions of higher education increased by 80 percent.
- Women benefit tremendously, and white women are the primary beneficiaries of affirmative action programs:
- According to the United States Labor Department, the primary beneficiaries of affirmative action are white women (“Reverse Discrimination,” 1995). The Department of Labor estimated that 6 million women workers are in higher occupational classifications today than they would have been without affirmative action policies. Gender based affirmative action policies that benefit women run the gamut from science camps for girls to policies at the University of Michigan that promote the enrollment of women in engineering programs to breast cancer screenings and women-only domestic violence shelters.
- Outreach, recruitment, and scholarships for women encourage participation in fields like medicine, science, computers and engineering,fields in which they are seriously underrepresented
- Government outreach programs ensure that women and minority owned businesses have a fair chance to secure government contracts.
- Studies show that affirmative action has brought about significant benefit to women. For example, Between 1972 and 1993:
- The percentage of women architects increased from 3% to nearly 19% of the total;
- The percentage of women doctors more than doubled from 10% to 22% of all doctors;
- The percentage of women lawyers grew from 4% to 23% of the national total;
- The percentage of female engineers went from less than 1% to nearly 9%;
- The percentage of female chemists grew from 10% to 30% of all chemists; and,
- The percentage of female college faculty went from 28% to 42% of all faculty.
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Affirmative Action as Black Entitlement: How the Media Distorts Our Image of Who the beneficiaries of affirmative action are.
Consider the cover story above. The story promises 10 ways to think about whether affirmative action is still necessary. But how does the cover illustration lead us to think about these programs? For instance, who does it suggest affirmative action is for? Who is left out of the picture? Is it about gender? Is it about all people of color? Is it about all classes of Americans, or just the privileged members of one marginalized group? What do you think about the person in the picture? Does he still “need” affirmative action?
There are so many things wrong with this picture that we will address only the single most problematic element: this is an artistic rendering of affirmative action, wholly created by the editors of the magazine.
The person in the picture was not chosen because he attended the University Michigan, the focal point of the controversy in question. Nor was he chosen because he was a beneficiary of some other affirmative action program. He was chosen because the cover artist wanted to tell a specific story, apparently that affirmative action is for the benefit of privileged blacks. This is a paid model playing a character. The preppy clothes he is wearing are not his. Not even the glasses are his own — there is a credit for them on the inside cover. He is a Black body on which someone draped a collared shirt, chinos, and a tie. Using the model in this way serves a very deliberate function: it makes us think that affirmative action is not about women, or all people of color, or people of all classes. In so doing, it triggers stereotypes in the viewer, stereotypes that most likely will lead readers to answer the question “Do we still need affirmative action?” with a resounding “NO!” of
Why is affirmative action consistently framed as a Black/White issue?
In spite of the incredible diversity of the beneficiaries of affirmative action, and notwithstanding the fact that most universities, corporations, and our Armed Forces maintain that such policies open the doors to their institutions for an extremely broad range of Americans, affirmative action is normally presented as a Black/White issue. Why do most discussions of it center on African Americans?
The answer, unfortunately, is that the critics of affirmative action characterize it as a Black issue because this enables them to use the negative racial stereotypes associated with African Americans to portray these policies as undeserved hand-outs to an “under-qualified and unmotivated” group of people, rather than as policies designed to uncover the capabilities of millions of Americans of all hues and genders. Sadly, the media is often complicit in these portrayals. In this regard, the heavy participation of white women in these programs is obscured by media portrayals which, for the most part, completely ignore the role of affirmative action in promoting equality for women.
In fact, it is because of the power of racial stereotypes, especially those promoted by the media, that people are unable to see beyond the false Black/ White dichotomy at the heart of this debate, even when given information about the wide scope of these policies. In this light, Janine Jackson’s report on the media coverage of affirmative action demonstrates that it tends to unfairly equate affirmative action with a form of”preferential treatment,” rarely links these programs to the remediation of contemporary forms of racial and gender discrimination, and normally centers the discussion on Blacks. Of the 314 articles in the study, only 37% addressed the effects of these policies on other people of color. Furthermore, the articles all but ignore the fact that women are the primary beneficiaries of these policies, with only 2% of the articles focusing on the effects of affirmative action on women. (Source: Affirmative Action Coverage Ignores Women and Discrimination).
Even when white women know firsthand the benefits of affirmative action to themselves and their community, many of them find themselves unwilling to support it. Read Sumi Cho’s article here.
As we can see, it is not enough to simply open people’s eyes to the wide array of affirmative action programs that benefit American society. We must also expose and attack the racial stereotypes that are used to characterize affirmative action policies as unfair preferences for unqualified people.
Bottom Line: If the phrase “affirmative action” more often led us to think about the diverse group of people for whom the doors to opportunity have been opened, it would be far more difficult to brush off these programs with a few well-chosen stereotypes. After all, given its sweeping reach, affirmative action is a prime example of what Dr. Martin Luther King meant when he said we are all caught in an inescapable network of mutuality. For when we are successful in tearing down unwarranted barriers to opportunities, we all benefit. |