News

I thought of Piper last week when The New York Times revealed that Zohran Mamdani, the surprise winner of New York City’s ...
A year after affirmative action was struck down, colleges began releasing admissions data for the class of 2028, the first class to be impacted by the decision.
Viewpoint diversity is more an escape from overbearing progressive professors than an entry into a forced conservative classroom.
An unintended consequence of affirmative action — a policy meant to boost diversity — is that it can be wielded like a weapon to make people of color feel like they don’t belong. The Times ...
Re “Justices Rule Against Affirmative Action” (front page, June 30): While I share the outrage directed at the Supreme Court’s striking down affirmative action, as the founder and director ...
The Trump administration has launched an investigation into the Minnesota Department of Human Services over its newly updated ...
Asian Americans do face bias in the college admissions process, says one educational policy expert. But the problem isn’t affirmative action.
The U.S. Supreme Court's ruling on affirmative action was met with predictable outcry from those claiming it will tear asunder universities' capacity to encourage diverse student bodies. It also ...
Experts deliberated the pros and cons of race-based affirmative action in a debate open to the public hosted by Johns Hopkins University's SNF Agora Institute ...
The letter argued that affirmative action was still important to help underprivileged students catch up to more well-off students who might not suffer from the same social disadvantages.
For example, after California banned affirmative action in state universities, the percentage of underrepresented minorities at UCLA dropped from 28% to 14% between 1995 and 1998.