Title: Civil Rights and Public Policy
1Civil Rights and Public Policy
2Civil Rights
- Policies designed to protect people against
arbitrary or discriminatory treatment by
government officials or individuals - Positive Rights
3Equality v. Inequality
- Racial discrimination
- Gender discrimination
- Discrimination based on age, disability, sexual
orientation, and other factors
4What might be included?
- To live free of bondage and intimidation
- To enter into contracts and own property
- To have access to businesses that serve the
public - To enjoy equal educational opportunities
- And many other things
5Conceptions of Equality
- all men are created equal
- What exactly did (does) this mean?
- In what sense can humans be considered equal?
- What is equality of opportunity?
- What are equal results or equal rewards?
6Constitution and Inequality
- The Constitution does not mention the word
equality - It only appears in the 14th Amendment
- One of the Reconstruction Amendments
- Contains the phrase equal protection of the
laws - Ignored for 100 years it is now one of the most
powerful tools for the promotion of equality
7Discrimination
- The state discriminates every time it makes
classification - The Court is concerned less with the fact of
discrimination and more with reasons used by the
state to justify its actions - They are concerned with noxious or malignant
forms of state discrimination - The state action doctrine means that the
Constitution does not apply to private acts of
discrimination
8Equal Protection of the Laws
- They do not require that the government must
promote equality - But all must have equal stature before the law
no arbitrary distinctions - Strauder v. West Virginia (1880) the courts
were going to interpret this phrase in a very
narrow sense - The America of the time accepted
institutionalized racism Religion Science
9Standards for Classification
- There are three levels of scrutiny, or analysis,
called standards of review - Critics of the Court, including its own members,
have called these standards arbitrary, confusing,
invidious, and unnecessary - Either the Amendment provides equal protection or
it doesnt. The wording makes no distinctions
10Basis of Standard of Applying theClassification
Review Test
- Race
- Inherently suspect (difficult to meet)
- Is the classification necessary to accomplish a
compelling governmental purpose and the least
restrictive way to reach the goal
11Basis of Standard of Applying theClassification
Review Test
- Gender
- Intermediate standard,
- a.k.a. semi- suspect or quasi-suspect (moderately
difficult to meet) - Does the classification bear a substantial
relationship to an important governmental goal?
12Basis of Standard of Applying theClassification
Review Test
- Other (age, wealth, etc.)
- Non-suspect or Reasonable (easy to meet)
- Does the classification have a rational
relationship to a legitimate governmental goal? - Also called the rationality test
13The Era of Reconstruction
- Many African-Americans had held public office in
the immediate post-war years - In 1876 Rutherford Hayes (R) ended Reconstruction
as part of a political deal leaving southern
blacks to their own devices - Southern states almost immediately passed Jim
Crow laws relegating them to second class
citizenship - The Ku Klux Klan and other organizations
terrorized the black community with impunity
14Post Reconstruction
- Blacks were as likely to be discriminated against
in the north as in the south - Almost all states had black codes
- In a series of decisions the Court restricted the
scope of the Civil Rights Acts of the 1860s and
70s - They also restricted the reach of the 15th
Amendment by upholding literacy tests, poll
taxes, and all white primaries
15Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
- Involved a Louisiana test case where a black man,
Homer Plessy, (7/8s white) was denied a seat in a
whites only rail car - The Court decided that the 14th Amendment was
only to mean equality before the law - It was not meant to ensure political, social, or
cultural equality - The law applied to both races equally
16Plessy v. Ferguson
- The only thing necessary is for the statute to be
reasonable - Who decides what is reasonable?
- The legislature!
- The Court also found that the only reason this
law gave the appearance of inferiority was
because the blacks chose to give it that meaning - Laws could not alter long-established customs of
society - Separate but equal became the standard
17The Dissent
- Justice John Marshall Harlan
- In the view of the Constitution, in the eye of
the law, there is in this country no superior,
dominant, ruling class of citizens.Our
Constitution is colorblind, and neither knows nor
tolerates classes among citizens. - Future Court decisions placed the emphasis on the
separate rather than on the equal - In actual fact there was no approximation of
equal ever effectually attempted
18Results
- A virtual system of apartheid resulted from the
decision - Racial discrimination and segregation were now
not only the de facto law of the land, but the de
jure as well - The standard of review in cases of racial
discrimination was to be the lowly rationality
test.
19Moving Forward
- The NAACP (National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People) set out to attack
Plessy by going after the equal component - Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada (1938) and
Sweatt v. Painter (1950) both involved the issue
of separate law schools - Testimony was introduced involving intangible
inequalities
20Brown v. Topeka Board of Education (1954)
- The Supreme Court decision holding that school
segregation in Topeka. Kansas was inherently
unconstitutional because it violated the 14th
Amendments guarantee of equal protection. This
landmark case ended the era of legal segregation
in the United States
21Brown v. Topeka Board of Education
- It was a combination of several cases
- Heard first in 1952 but reargued in 1953
- Chief Justice Vinson, a supporter of Plessy died
just before the Court opened its session - President Eisenhower named Earl Warren as Chief
Justice - He convinced the Court to render a unanimous
decision in favor of desegregation
22Brown v. Topeka Board of Education
- The decision overturned Plessy
- Several southern states issued a Manifesto in
which they claimed the authority to nullify the
law within their borders - 100 congressmen signed a resolution condemning
the clear abuse of judicial authority - The use of social science data was attacked by
certain legal scholars - intangibles
23Brown II
- In a decision rendered one year later the Court
answered the question as to who was to implement
the decision of Brown I - It was to be the states themselves and they were
to do so with all deliberate speed - This seemed to leave the possibility of foot
dragging at the local level - As Justice Frankfurter commented," only one
thunderbolt from Zeus at a time
24Results
- By 1964 delays were no longer tolerable
- Federal funds would be cut to school systems that
remained segregated - The Court found that busing could be used to
create integrated schools (Swann v. Mecklenburg
County Schools (1971) - Busing came to the north as well as the south
- Busing has never been popular with either blacks
or whites
25Civil Rights Act of 1964
- Made racial discrimination illegal in hotels,
motels, restaurants, and other places of public
accommodation - Forbade discrimination in employment on the basis
of race, color, national origin, religion, or
gender - Created the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission (EEOC) to monitor and enforce
protections against discrimination
26Civil Rights Act of 1964
- Provided for withholding federal grants from
state and local governments and other
institutions that practiced racial discrimination - Strengthened voting rights legislation
- Authorized the U.S. Justice Department to
initiate law suits to desegregate public schools
and facilities
27The Right to Vote
- The Court had struck down numerous state laws
designed to keep blacks from voting - Grandfather clause Guinn v. U.S. (1915)
- White primary Smith v. Allwright (1944)
- Poll taxes 24th Amendment (1964)
- Poll taxes in state elections Harper v.
Virginia State Board of Elections (1966)
28Voting Rights Act of 1965
- Prohibited any government from using voting
procedures that denied a person the vote on the
basis of race or color - Hundreds of thousands of black voters registered
to vote in southern states - Ensured that their votes would not be diluted
through gerrymandering - Lately the Court has not looked kindly on using
race as a basis for districting
29Native Americans
- American Indians were only given the right to
vote in 1924 - Indian Claims Act (1946) designed to settle all
of the financial disputes arising over the
seizing of their lands - Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez (1978)
strengthened the tribal powers of individual
tribe members and furthered self-government by
Indian tribes
30Hispanic Americans
- The largest minority group
- Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund
(MALDEF, 1968) - Led by Cesar Chavez who organized migrant workers
as the United Farm Workers - Like all other minorities they benefited from the
civil rights movement of the 1960s - They are now a powerful political force in many
districts and cities
31Asian Americans
- Fastest growing minority group
- They suffered from discrimination in education,
housing, voting, as well as restrictions on
immigration and naturalization - Korematsu v. United States (1944) upheld the
internment of more than 100,000
Japanese-Americans in encampments during World
War II (the only time a racial restriction has
ever passed strict scrutiny)
32Women
- Seneca Falls Convention (1848) called for the
repeal of laws that were directly aimed at
maintaining female legal subjugation - Women were denied the right to vote in most
states - 19th Amendment (1920) officially guaranteed
women the right to vote - President Wilson was initially opposed but WWI
changed his mind
33Equal Rights Amendment
- Originally proposed in 1923 but not voted on
until 1972 when it was defeated - Despite receiving the right to vote, the status
of women went largely unchanged for 50 years - Many women had opposing points of view about the
roles that they should play in society - Many laws were passed to protect women
34Gender Discrimination
- Reed v. Reed (1971) In a surprise decision the
Court struck down an Idaho state law that gave
men precedence over women in the administering of
an estate - All of the previous cases had seen gender
discrimination upheld because the laws merely had
to be reasonable - If not reasonable, must it be strict scrutiny?
35Gender Discrimination
- Frontiero v. Richardson (1973) A plurality (4)
of the Court called for strict scrutiny saying
the discrimination based on gender would also be
considered suspect - Three other judges were in agreement on the
unconstitutionality of the law but opposed the
strict scrutiny requirement - Justice Rehnquist disagreed with all of the
others and favored reasonableness
36Suspect Category
- What makes a classification such as race suspect?
- Racial classifications are suspect because there
is a long history of racial discrimination in the
U.S. - Racial classifications are suspect because it is
difficult to imagine situations in which the
state might discriminate for reasons that are not
stereotypical or invidious - Race is an immutable characteristic and cannot be
changed and is beyond the control of the
individual
37Craig v. Boren (1976)
- Females in Oklahoma could purchase 3.2 beer at
age 18 but males could not - This is the first time that the Court finds that
gender-based classifications must meet more than
the rationality test but less than the strict
scrutiny test - An intermediate test would be used to determine
if a state had a substantial interest in enacting
a law
38Women in the Workplace
- Civil Rights act of 1964 banned gender
discrimination in employment - Title IX of the Education Act of 1972 forbade
gender discrimination in federally funded
education programs including sports - Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 made it
illegal to exclude pregnancy and childbirth from
sick leave and health benefits plans - Dothard v. Rawlinson (1977) physical
requirements for jobs must not be arbitrary
39Sexual Harrassment
- The Court has indicated on several occasions that
a hostile or abusive work environment is a form
of gender discrimination - Employers are responsible for the preventing and
eliminating harassment at work - Schools are also covered including
student-on-student harassment - The military has also come under fire for its
handling of sexual harassment claims
40Other Categories
- Age discrimination cases are only subject to the
rationality test - The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
strengthened the protections against
discrimination in the workplace, at school, and
in the public sphere reasonable
accommodations must be provided to those with
disabilities - A negative has always been the costs involved
41Gay and Lesbian Rights
- They may find it the hardest to gain civil rights
- Bowers v. Hardwick (1986) found a Georgia law
banning homosexual activity constitutional - Lawrence v. Texas (2003) the Court overturned
Bowers v. Hardwick finding the Texas law an undue
intrusion of the right to privacy
42Affirmative Action
- A policy designed to give special attention to or
compensatory treatment of members of some
previously disadvantaged group - An effort to move beyond equal opportunity to
equal results - This often took the form of numerical quotas
- Used by schools of all sorts, police and fire
departments, government procurement agencies, etc.
43Affirmative Action
- Regents of the University of California v. Bakke
(1978) The UC-Davis medical school reserved 16
of 100 openings for minorities, Bakke sued saying
he was denied equal protection of the law (14th)
and that it violated Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 which forbids racial or ethnic
preferences in programs supported by federal money
44Affirmative Action
- The state argued that it had a compelling
interest in diversifying the student body to
reflect the composition of its population - In a 5 to 4 decision the Court agreed with the
need for diversity as a legitimate interest but
found quotas unacceptable as a method for fixing
the problem - In cases such as this the intermediate test could
be applied
45Affirmative Action
- In a series of decisions handed down between 1978
and 1995 the Court seemed unable to agree on
exactly what the standards should be for deciding
these types of cases - Should benign racial classifications be held to
the same scrutiny as invidious ones - When, if ever, is it ever permissible for the
state to discriminate based on race?
46Affirmative Action
- Grutter v. Bolinger (2003) The Court found that
strict scrutiny applies to all affirmative action
cases. In this case the University of Michigan
Law School could use racially biased criteria for
purposes of admission because it was narrowly
tailored to achieve a compelling state interest - Gratz v. Bolinger (2003) U of M could not use a
point system in its undergraduate admissions
process because it constituted a quotas system - These decisions did not settle the question of
when is discrimination permissible
47Civil Rights
- Equality, while a basic principle of democracy,
can lead to what Madison called the tyranny of
the majority - The circumstances of minorities changed when they
gained the vote - Civil rights laws increase the scope and power of
government - Civil rights laws also protect the individual
against collective discrimination