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Is Affirmative Action On the Way Out? Opportunities Still Endure

Clarence Page, Tribune Content Agency on

It’s an argument that was just waiting to happen, helped along by conservative legal activists. But I’m also not surprised to see a lot less agitation around this issue than, say, the high court’s recent overturning of the Roe v. Wade abortion rights decision.

As an African American parent, I’m not delighted that affirmative action might end, but I was never that satisfied with it anyway.

For one thing, It reaches too few children who need help. Instead we see a “creaming,” as some call it, to help the high-performing students who are the most likely to succeed anyway.

As a step toward racial equality, affirmative action is constantly at war with the more fundamental principles of fairness that Americans of goodwill would prefer.

Certainly, after centuries of slavery, Jim Crow segregation and systemic discrimination, we needed radical steps to move our racial divided country closer to true equality of rights and opportunity.

But the end of affirmative action would not mean the end of opportunity. Rather, it should be the beginning of a new movement to take better advantage of the opportunities recent decades of hard-won progress already have brought to us.

Which brings me back to the subject of Black American immigrants.

Conservatives often argue that the academic performance of immigrants from Asia, in particular, and their offspring has been so successful without affirmative action that it has produced a new — and misleading — stereotype: the “model minority.”

In fact, in America’s ethnic mixing bowl, immigrants and their children often have excelled more, regardless of race, than native-born children.

 

The same spirit of relentless optimism that has driven countless immigrants to seek and find opportunity in this land shows up among Black immigrants too.

Overall, Black immigrants earn college degrees at a similar rate to U.S. immigrants overall. Some 31% of Black immigrants ages 25 and older have a bachelor’s degree or higher, almost as high as the 33% share of the overall immigrant population in the U.S. with a college degree, according to a study r by the Pew Research Center in January.

In fact, Pew reports, the number of Black immigrant bachelor’s degree holders has grown faster between 2000 and 2019 than that of the Black U.S.-born population (8 percentage points), the entire U.S.-born population (9 points) and the overall immigration population (9 points).

I don’t view that as a reason to celebrate and declare that we Americans have made so much progress that we don’t need some sort of action, “affirmative” or otherwise to help equalize opportunity for children of color.

Quite the contrary, I think the success of immigrants of color, including Black immigrants, offer excellent underappreciated examples of how and why we need to help more young African Americans take advantage of the opportunities that we already have.

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(E-mail Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotribune.com.)

©2022 Clarence Page. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


(c) 2022 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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