Muscat Daily

Harvard on trial over alleged discrimina­tion against Asians

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New York, United States - Harvard University went on trial on Monday over an opaque admissions selection process that critics say discrimina­tes against Asian students.

A lawsuit has challenged the use of race as a factor in Harvard admissions - a decades-old push to boost minority enrolments at America’s oldest university. Federal Judge Allison Dale Burroughs heard opening arguments in the non-jury civil trial in Boston expected to last three weeks.

Harvard denies discrimina­ting against Asians but defends its use of broader selection criteria other than academic excellence,

such as personalit­y, to form a diverse student body. The university also notes that the proportion of students of Asian origin has increased substantia­lly since 2010, and today account for 23 per cent of the 2,000 students admitted to the freshman class out of 40,000 applicants. There are around 15 per cent blacks and 12 per cent Hispanics.

Pitted against the revered academic institutio­n is Students for Fair Admissions, a group led by conservati­ve white activist Edward Blum, who previously attacked affirmativ­e action policies at the University of Texas.

The US Supreme Court ruled against him in 2016, upholding the university’s admissions policy.

In opening arguments, the group’s lawyer Adam Mortara claimed that Harvard had used personalit­y criteria to suppress Asian admissions in favour of black, Hispanic and white applicants.

Harvard ‘let the wolf of racial bias in through the front door’, The

Boston Globe quoted him as saying.

University lawyer Bill Lee argued that ‘Harvard cannot achieve its educationa­l goals without considerin­g race’, insisting that race is never a negative in admissions.

Aware of the negative publicity the case could bring to his institutio­n, Harvard’s recently appointed president Larry Becow issued a letter to staff and students before the trial opened recalling the college’s duty to incorporat­e racial diversity into the campus.

‘Harvard would be a dull place - and not likely achieve the educationa­l aspiration­s we have for our students - if we shared the same background­s, interests, experience­s and expectatio­ns for ourselves’, he wrote.

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has backed Blum’s suit, asserting that Harvard engages in ‘racial balancing’ in its admissions process at the expense of students of Asian origin.

In his letter, Becow noted that the Supreme Court had in the past held up Harvard’s admissions process as ‘an examplar’ in how to achieve a diverse student body by considerin­g race as one of several factors.

Analysts expect the ultra-sensitive case to once again come before the Supreme Court, where a conservati­ve majority has recently been solidified with the addition of Trump nominee Brett Kavanaugh.

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