Through Streets Broad and Narrow: Six “Centrist” Justices on the Paths to Inclusion

Karst discusses the "centrists" Supreme Court Justices appointed by Republican presidents from 1969 to 2008. He focuses on the six Justices--Harry A. Blackmun, Lewis F. Powell Jr, John Paul Stevens, Sandra Day O'Connor, Anthony M. Kennedy, and David H. Souter--who have a shared concer...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Supreme Court review 2011-01, Vol.2010 (1), p.1-33
1. Verfasser: Karst, Kenneth L.
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description Karst discusses the "centrists" Supreme Court Justices appointed by Republican presidents from 1969 to 2008. He focuses on the six Justices--Harry A. Blackmun, Lewis F. Powell Jr, John Paul Stevens, Sandra Day O'Connor, Anthony M. Kennedy, and David H. Souter--who have a shared concern for rights to inclusion, to group status equality. Examining the theme of inclusion in the work of six Justices, he considers both its place in accommodating contending interests and its use in achieving various forms of social utility. The accounts show that all six Justices have participated in preserving the validation of one or another version of race-conscious diversity admissions to state universities and schools--that is, preserving moves (or at least gestures) toward integration in the face of repeated assault by the cultural counterrevolutionaries.
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subjects Affirmative action
Blackmun, Harry A
Chief justice
Civil rights
Equal rights
Gay rights
Gender discrimination
Gender equality
Judges & magistrates
Judgments
Judicial process
Kennedy, Anthony M
Litigation
O Connor, Sandra Day
Powell, Lewis F Jr
Race relations
School admission
Souter, David H
Stevens, John Paul
Supreme Court decisions
Supreme Court justices
Voting
Womens rights
title Through Streets Broad and Narrow: Six “Centrist” Justices on the Paths to Inclusion
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