The Trials Of Affirmative Action Essay, Research Paper
Encarta Encyclopedia defines Affirmative Action as the ?system of policies used in the United States to increase opportunities for minorities and women by favoring them in hiring and promotion, college admissions, and the awarding of government contracts. Generally, affirmative action has been undertaken by governments, businesses, or educational institutions to remedy the effects of past discrimination against a group.? Favoritism is enforced through government agencies.
There is a large amount of controversy today surrounding the use of affirmative action in Florida?s workplace and in the use of admissions in college universities. With the (possible) implementation of Governor Jeb Bush?s ?One Florida Plan?, race and gender would no longer be a factor in these decisions. This plan of the governor?s has reawakened the controversies and needs for affirmative action in today?s society. To make an informed opinion about the support of the issue or against the plan, one must look at both sides of the debate and some of the issues.
As it has been long documented, women and minorities have always taken a back seat to the white male in the business world and hit the proverbial ?glass ceiling?. With the use of affirmative action policies, race and gender quotas are made to insure that women and minorities have an equal opportunity to positions in the white male dominated universities and business world, as well as in local and state government funded contracting projects in which a lesser known minority-run company may not have the opportunities that an established ?good old boy? firm has. Affirmative action supporters feel that these policies are necessary to insure fair selection. Affirmative action guarantees diversity in the education selection process, so that an individual of different race or gender with lower grades and a lower family income and housing may have the same chance at a university that a white male from a higher family income and better school system. President Lyndon B. Johnson, who made affirmative action an executive order stated: “You do not take a person who, for years, has been hobbled by chains and liberate him, bring him up to the starting line of a race and then say, ‘You are free to compete with all the others’ and still justly believe that you have been completely fair.? Adding, he said that the U.S. must have “not just equality as a right and a theory but equality as a fact and equality as a result.”
The other side of the coin feels that the use of affirmative action has turned into reverse discrimination, and that companies and universities no longer seek to look for the best worker or student, but instead look at numbers and quotas. While many of the people against affirmative actions do acknowledge the fact that there has been injustices and discrimination past and present, they feel that companies and the city, state and federal governments are literally handing jobs to lesser-qualified individuals at times. This can be caused if an employer has only one position open in his/her business. If two people apply for the same job, but one is an experienced person who
Looking at both sides of the spectrum, one sees that affirmative action is a plan on a grand scale that affects groups but becomes all the more life-affecting on an individual level. While one group says it is needed to ensure fair selection in education and in the workforce and to reduce possible discrimination, the other side contests that this ?fairness? has created other social problems and that they are now the victims of discrimination.
1. ?Affirmative Action? . Encarta Encyclopedia. (2000) Online. Internet: http://encarta.msn.com/index/conciseindex/AC/0AC74000.htm?z=1&pg=2&br=1
2. Pinkerton, James P. “Ending Quotas Should Help End Racism”. Los Angeles Times, 4 June 1995, p. M5
3. ?University of California Regents v. Bakke?.Enclyclopedia.com. (2000) Online. Internet: http://www.encyclopedia.com/