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The Retreat from Race - Asian-American Admissions and Racial Politics (Paperback, New)
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The Retreat from Race - Asian-American Admissions and Racial Politics (Paperback, New)
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An excellent book. Takagi takes a very complex and sensitive
subject-racial politics-and shows, through a careful analysis . . .
that changes in the discourse about Asian American admissions have
facilitated a 'retreat from race' in the area of affirmative
action. . . . This book will appeal to an audience significantly
wider than a typical academic one."- David Karen, Bryn Mawr
CollegeCharges by Asian Americans that the top universities in the
United States used quotas to limit the enrollment of Asian-American
students developed into one of the most controversial public
controversies in higher education since the Bakke case. In Retreat
from Race, Dana Takagi follows the debates over Asian-American
admissions at Berkeley, UCLA, Brown, Stanford, Harvard, and
Princeton. She explains important developments in the politics of
race: changes in ethnic coalitions, reconstruction of the debate
over affirmative action, and the conservative challenge to the
civil rights agenda of the 1960s. Takagi examines the history and
significance of the Asian American admissions controversy on
American race relations both inside and outside higher education.
Takagi's central argument is that the Asian-American admissions
controversy facilitated a subtle but important shift in affirmative
action policy away from racial preferences toward class
preferences. She calls this development a retreat from race. Takagi
suggests that the retreat signals not only an actual policy shift
but also the increasing reluctance on the part of intellectuals,
politicans, and policy analysts to identify and address social
problems as explicitly racial problems. Moving beyond the
university setting, Takagi explores the political significance of
the retreat from race by linking Asian-American admissions to other
controversies in higher education and in American politics,
including the debates over political correctness and
multiculturalism. In her assessment, the retreat from race is
likely to fail at its promise of easing racial tension and
promoting racial equality.
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