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Susan Taing
excerpted from: Susan Taing, Lost in the Shuffle: The Failure of
the Pan-Asian Coalition to Advance the Interests of Southeast Asian
Americans, 16 Berkeley La Raza Law Journal 23- 51 (Spring 2005) (252
Footnotes)
In the summer of 2003, members of the academic community breathed
a collective sigh of relief when the Supreme Court announced in the
landmark decision, Grutter v. Bollinger, that educational diversity
was indeed a compelling state interest. The Court upheld the
University of Michigan Law School's (hereinafter Law School)
race-conscious admission policy, which professed the Law School's
commitment to enrolling a diverse student body. The Law School's
admission policy considered factors that contribute to a diverse
student body such as having lived or traveled abroad, an extensive
record of community service, or an unusual intellectual
accomplishment. However, it gave special consideration to race in
the case of African American, Latino American, and Native American
students. The Grutter decision affirmed the Law School's commitment
to racial diversity as constitutionally permissible and held that
the Law School could give special consideration to certain racial
groups.
The Law School's commitment to enrolling students from racial
minority groups is peculiar because of the absence of Asian
Americans. The Law School acknowledged that it omitted Asians from
the admission policy because a significant number of Asian students
were already being admitted to the Law School.
Parties on both sides of Grutter hotly debated whether Asian
Americans were hurt by the Law School's admission policy. The
Petitioner's brief to the Court argued that the Law School's
race-conscious admission policy subjected Asian Americans to reverse
discrimination. In contrast, the National Asian Pacific American
Legal Consortium (NAPALC) argued in its amicus curiae brief that
Asian Pacific American (APA) applicants are not harmed by
affirmative action. NAPALC advanced three arguments: First, like all
other students, Asian Americans benefit from a more racially diverse
learning environment. Second, the Law School's policy does not only
consider racial diversity but other types of diversity, e.g., types
based on education, experience, etc., which APA applicants can
highlight. Third, empirical evidence demonstrates that the
prohibition of affirmative action programs in California did not
correlate with higher enrollments of Asian Pacific Americans in
state law schools.
The error committed by the Law School, the petitioner, NAPALC, and
the other APA groups that joined NAPALC as amici curiae is all too
common. Asian Pacific Americans, as a political identity group, are
comprised of various member-groups that descend from countries in
East Asia, South Asia, and Southeast Asia as well Hawaii and other
Pacific Islands. The Law School blatantly omitted Asian Pacific
Americans from the dialogue. All parties and amici curiae tacitly
agreed that Asian Pacific Americans are already adequately
represented in the Law School and that they do not need the Law
School to make a special commitment to them in order to be enrolled
in significant numbers. Underlying this belief is the stereotype of
Asian Americans as the model minority and the related erroneous
assumption that Asian Pacific Americans are a uniform group. In
reality, several Asian American groups are struggling to improve
their socioeconomic status. These groups are usually not enrolled in
higher education in significant numbers. Yet, despite the minimal
representation of these groups, colleges and graduate schools
nevertheless frequently categorically exclude APAs from
race-conscious programs such as the one employed by the Law School.
This Comment will focus on one such group, Cambodian Americans. I
will illustrate the shortfalls of the Asian American pan-ethnic
identity, and suggest that marginalized groups such as Cambodian
Americans must assert their own identity in order to assure that
issues pertinent to their own group are heard and addressed. My goal
in writing is twofold. First, I encourage marginalized groups to
assert their own interests. Secondarily, I hope to voice the message
to universities that there are significant Asian American
populations that would benefit greatly from inclusion in affirmative
action programs.
Part I discusses the Supreme Court's decision in Grutter, analyzing
the opinion's implication for universities' admissions policies.
Part II discusses the pan-ethnic movement that began in the 1960s
with the goal of uniting Asian descended minority groups under an
umbrella coalition--Asian American. The pan-ethnic coalition was
meant to unify Asian Americans and to create a mass base so that
people identifying with this ethnic group could mobilize to combat
discrimination and violence against Asians. This Part also briefly
critiques the Model Minority Myth. Part III discusses Cambodian
Americans' history, traditional culture, socioeconomic status, and
the familial factors that led to this group's marginalized
socioeconomic status. Part IV briefly discusses the shortcomings of
the pan-Asian coalition, its failure to advance the interests of its
more marginalized constituents, and the reasons for this failure.
Finally Part V asks, "Why not identity?" and proposes that Cambodian
Americans build their own distinctive political consciousness in
order to form a coalition that is not based solely on ethnic lines,
but also upon socio-economic and political issues.
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