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Affirmative Action
An explanation and comparison of goal-based affirmative action and process-based affirmative action. -- 1,354 words; MLA

Affirmative Action in the Medical Community
Looks at the continuing debate over affirmative action programs and, in particular, affirmative action programs in the medical community. -- 857 words; MLA

Affirmative Action in Schools
A comparison of goal-based affirmative action and process-based affirmative action within the education system. -- 2,071 words; MLA

A Historical Perspective of Affirmative Action
Discusses affirmative action from a historical, economic, and social perspective. -- 4,816 words; APA

Affirmative Action
This paper argues the dichotomy of affirmative action in education and the workforce. -- 2,600 words; MLA

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AFFIRMATIVE ACTION??

Affirmative Action:
What is affirmative action? This has been a very interesting question throughout the past
thirty years. Many people would like to answer it with simply the name given to programs
that try to correct past and ongoing discriminations against women, racial minorities,
and others in the work force and in education. Where this answer may be a good textbook
style response, not all people agree with it. 
Affirmative action was created out of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It
actually went into effect out of an Executive order that was delivered by President
Lyndon B. Johnson in 1965. He wanted to do more than what the non-discrimination laws of
the time were trying to accomplish. He also wanted to see minorities and women get a
better chance at advancement in their current jobs. President Nixon, whom also
implemented the same Executive order, kept affirmative action alive. President Ford
helped to update affirmative action by adding the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the
Vietnam Era Veterans Readjustment Act of 1974. Years later President Carter created an
office to handle affirmative action cases that dealt with the contract aspects of the
original Affirmative Action plan, and called it the Office of Federal Contract Compliance
Programs.
There were three prime aspects of affirmative action that fell into place. The first was
affirmative action in employment. The second area is affirmative action dealing with
contracts. The third area of affirmative action deals with the area of education. 
When we look at the affirmative action plans of employment, this is one area that most
all of us have came into contact at some point in our lives. When you and I go to apply
for a job with a company, we feel that if we are the best qualified for the position that
we should receive it. This is the way that most normal people would feel. With
Affirmative Action, this idea of the best-qualified person for the job is not a reality.
Not all companies still go with the idea of Affirmative Action as a written policy, but
may still have it as an acting practice in their hiring.
Throughout the past thirty years many people have been promoted, hired, or even fired
based upon their color of their skin, or on the basis of their sex. Does this sound like
a very fair thing to do? Most would not think so, but it is a reality that Affirmative
Action has put into play. In May of 1994 at St. Bonaventure University, the president of
the university fired 22 of his faculty members for being males. He openly admitted that
the firings were based on gender and not qualifications. Some of these professors' even
had tenure that were fired. Needless to say, a group of twelve of the men went to the US
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and brought up charges on the school. This is not
the only example of a bias workplace that is moving in a reverse discriminatory fashion.
There are many other businesses and companies that like to give special considerations to
the minorities and females, just so that they can put off some appearance that they are
trying to be fair to all of their employees. 
This idea of hiring anyone that is less qualified than someone else based on the color or
his or her skin is wrong. Discrimination no matter how you want to view it is not
anything that will go away by forcing companies to put into practice a program that
selectively picks the worker that is less qualified, but happens to fit in the correct
minority group or is female. When a company does this it is setting itself up for
internal problems with workers that already work there. Any idea of discrimination or
racism that already exists in the workers may be heightened instead of lessened. The idea
that your coworker didn't have to score as high on the test, meet the same requirements,
or have as much schooling as you because they are a minority is going to cause most
people to feel a bit enraged. In a business where a person's physical skills are an
important part of the job, such as heavy machinery, hiring a less qualified person could
cause safety issues as well. Would you want someone working a crane around you if they
barely passed the test for operations? From an administrative standpoint the management
may also feel a negative attitude toward being forced to hire someone who they know
doesn't fit the job, but some sort of government program is telling them too. This could
cause internal conflict at even the management level toward the workers. 
Contract work between the government and contractors is another area that was targeted by
the Affirmative Action programs. The same type of safety issues are the first concerns
that come to mind when you think of the government hiring potentially less qualified
contractors to do work for them. The upside to this part of the plan is it helps to break
away from some of the political ties that some contractors have had in the past. It gives
some of the smaller companies a chance to prove themselves.
Education is another area of Affirmative Action that has had its criticisms. The
admittance of a student for educational purposes without having to meet the same
requirements as the whole seems to me to be a bit discriminative in nature. A popular
case that has occurred in our history was that of Regrents of the University of
California v. Bakke (1978). In this case the University had reserved 16 of its 100
openings for minorities. The other 64 slots had already been filled so because Bakke was
not a minority, his admittance was denied, even though he was more qualified than his
minority competitors. 
The admittance of a student to a University or any other college program without having
to score as high as the general population on the entrance exams is another form of
Affirmative Action discrimination. At Ivy League colleges the median GPA of applicants is
close to a 4.0 and SAT scores are close to 1300. The minorities that apply are admitted
with a GPA of less than 3.0 and an SAT score of less than 1000. Is this really letting in
the most qualified and elite students? I really don't see how it could be. 
The Affirmative Action programs started off with the idea that our country was going to
try to make up for some of the bad things that happened to the minorities of our country
many years ago. The idea that anybody owes anyone special treatment for something in our
past is a bit unfounded. I agree that Affirmative Action programs helped to do away with
segregation in a lot of instances and even finally let some of the blacks get into
college. This part of the plan I agree with. The programs are now out of date however.
President Clinton has addressed this issue during his presidency. He has brought about
four standards for all Affirmative Action programs that still exist: no quotas in theory
or practice, no illegal discrimination of any kind, no preferences for people that are
not qualified, and as soon as the program has succeeded it must be retired. Although the
president has stated these guidelines, it hasn't changed everyone's way of business or
thinking. 
The people who are benefiting from the Affirmative Action programs that are still around
today are people who never suffered any injustice from our past. Our work force is now
being made up of younger people who never once had the government tell them were they had
to get a drink of water or sit on a bus. Those days have passed and it is time for our
country to move on and let the past rest. Affirmative Action is nothing more than a legal
way to discriminate. If the plans are meant to make up for the discrimination of the
minorities of the past by discriminating against the majority now, then that is saying
that two wrongs make a right. Now the only one who suffers is the white male who gets
rejected for a position for being part of the majority. Will this whole idea of
Affirmative Action really help end the barriers of discrimination, or will it just enrage
the people who are now suffering because of it and make the situation worse? 
by, CAC, ASU


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