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You are here: Home / PRRAC Update / Press Advisory (December 2, 2012): Release of the federal school diversity guidance

Press Advisory (December 2, 2012): Release of the federal school diversity guidance

December 2, 2012 by

Civil Rights Groups: School Diversity Guidance “Good for Our Young People, for Our Communities and for Our Nation” 

Washington, DC – In response to the joint guidance released today by the United States Department of Education and the United States Department of Justice, civil rights groups released a joint statement below.  The guidance provides a roadmap for K-12 schools, colleges, and universities to implement the voluntary diversity and integration standards set by the Supreme Court’s decisions in Grutter v. Bollinger (2003) and Parents Involved v. Seattle Schools (2007).

“This thoughtfully crafted guidance affirms, as a majority of Supreme Court justices have recognized, that K-12 schools, colleges, and universities have compelling interests in ensuring integration and alleviating racial and economic isolation in our schools.

As the new guidance states, “providing students with diverse, inclusive educational opportunities from an early age is crucial to achieving the nation’s educational and civic goals.” In short, we agree that these recommendations are good for our young people, for our communities and for our nation.

Racial segregation and concentrated poverty are increasing in our nation’s schools, suggesting that we are backtracking on the successes of the civil rights movement. Many schools are more racially isolated today than they were in the 1970s. Today’s guidance recognizes the harms of resegregation and the benefits of diversity.

We echo the Department of Education and the Department of Justice, as well as the Supreme Court majority, in acknowledging that “the skills students need for success in ‘today’s increasingly global marketplace can only be developed through exposure to widely diverse people, cultures, ideas, and viewpoints.'”

Although K-12 and higher educational institutions can seek alternatives above and beyond the avenues suggested by the guidance, we stand ready to work with the Federal Government in this vital effort to promote inclusive educational opportunities, for the sake of all our children – and for the long-term well-being of our nation.”

Signed,

The American Civil Liberties Union

Press Contact: Sandhya Bathija, 202-568-0079, sbathija@dcaclu.org

Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard Law School

The Lawyers’ Committee For Civil Rights Under the Law

Press Contact: Kim Hayes, 202-662-8318, khayes@lawyerscommittee.org

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

Press Contact: Scott Westbrook Simpson, 202.492.4379, Simpson@civilrights.org

MALDEF: Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund

Press Contact:Jim Ferg-Cadima, jferg-cadima@maldef.org, 202-293-2828

NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc.

Press Contact: Damon Hewitt, 212.965.2257, dhewitt@naacpldf.org

The National Coalition on School Diversity

Press Contact: Prof. John C. Brittain, 832.687.3007, jbrittatty@comcast.net

Poverty & Race Research Action Council

Press Contact: Saba Bireda, (m) 347.512.2746, (o) 202.906.8043

sbireda@prrac.org

 

(for more information on the National Coalition on School Diversity, see www.school-diversity.org)

Filed Under: PRRAC Update

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The Poverty & Race Research Action Council (PRRAC) is a civil rights law and policy organization based in Washington, D.C. Our mission is to promote research-based advocacy strategies to address structural inequality and disrupt the systems that disadvantage low-income people of color. PRRAC was founded in 1989, through an initiative of major civil rights, civil liberties, and anti-poverty groups seeking to connect advocates with social scientists working at the intersection of race and poverty…Read More

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