The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Harvard once again disputes Asian-American bias claims

- By Nick Anderson

Harvard University disputed anew on Friday allegation­s that it discrimina­tes against Asian-Americans when selecting an undergradu­ate class, asserting in court papers that legal foes had failed to mount a persuasive case in a lawsuit seeking to end considerat­ion of race in admissions.

The university is contesting an effort by the group Students for Fair Admissions to obtain a ruling without trial in the suit pending in federal court in Boston.

Harvard said the group’s motion for an immediate ruling, filed last month, was “not remotely plausible” and that it offered “a misleading narrative” about the university’s methods and record in admissions. The university says race is one factor among many that it weighs in annually assembling a freshman class of roughly 1,650 students from more than 40,000 applicants. Demographi­c diversity, it says, yields crucial benefits for the campus by exposing students to varying viewpoints.

“The evidence leaves no doubt that Harvard permissibl­y seeks those educationa­l benefits in the flexible, non-mechanical manner permitted by the Supreme Court,” the university said in its latest legal brief.

Students for Fair Admissions claims that Harvard has imposed an artificial — and illegal — ceiling on the number of Asian-Americans it enrolls through a process tilted in favor of applicants from other racial and ethnic groups. To build its argument, the group obtained access to tens of thousands of pages of internal documents and a database with informatio­n on more than 200,000 applicants to Harvard over several years.

The plaintiff hired a Duke University economist, Peter Arcidiacon­o, to examine the data. He concluded that Asian-American applicants suffer a “significan­t penalty” relative to white students when Harvard rates their personal qualities and applicatio­ns and when it makes admission decisions. Harvard, in turn, hired an economist from the University of California at Berkeley, David Card, to conduct a separate review. Card disputed Arcidiacan­o’s findings and said the Duke economist had neglected to consider data that would have yielded different conclusion­s.

The dueling analyses were made public last month in briefs filed with U.S. District Judge Allison D. Burroughs. Both sides have asked Burroughs for summary judgment. But most observers expect the case to go to trial. The case has featured lengthy wrangling over how much of Harvard’s admissions process will be revealed — a subject of intense interest to many college-bound students.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Harvard has asserted in court papers that legal foes failed to mount a persuasive case in a lawsuit seeking to end considerat­ion of race in admissions.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Harvard has asserted in court papers that legal foes failed to mount a persuasive case in a lawsuit seeking to end considerat­ion of race in admissions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States