No Racial Quotas Needed at Law Schools Says American Bar Association

The American Bar Association (ABA) will no longer require law schools to impose strict racial enrollment quotas to maintain accreditation.

The proposal, first made public in May 2021, would have required law schools to submit yearly progress reports on minority enrollment to the ABA. Law schools would have run the risk of losing their accreditation if they did not increase the enrollment of “underrepresented groups.”

The Washington Free Beacon reported that the proposal went through three rounds of changes before the association’s house of delegates ultimately decided to withdraw it. However, they did not rule out revisiting it in the future.

A statement that received criticism from many in the legal circle — including from prominent colleges — was in an early draft cautioning that US anti-discrimination statutes were “not a basis” for “non-compliance” with the diversity requirement.

Ten Yale Law School professors said in a public statement in June 2021 that the proposal “instructs schools to risk violating state or federal law in order to retain accreditation,” The Washington Free Beacon reported.

According to a document from the Bar Association summarizing the criticism it received, law professors were voicing “legal issues” about the “use of racial balancing or quotas” as recently as February.

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No Racial Quotas Needed at Law Schools: American Bar Association