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Cover image for book The Integration of the UCLA School of Law, 1966—1978

The Integration of the UCLA School of Law, 1966—1978

Architects of Affirmative Action
By:Miguel Espinoza
Publisher:Bloomsbury USA
Print ISBN:9781498531627
eText ISBN:9781498531634
Edition:1
Format:Reflowable

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In 1966, a group of UCLA law school professors sparked the era of affirmative action by creating one of the earliest and most expansive race-conscious admissions programs in higher education. The Legal Education Opportunity Program (LEOP) served to integrate the legal profession by admitting large cohorts of minority students under non-traditional standards, and sending them into the world as emissaries of integration upon graduation. Together, these students bent the arc of educational equality, and the LEOP served as a model for similar programs around the country. Drawing upon rich historical archives and interviews with dozens of students and professors who helped integrate UCLA, this book argues that such programs should be reinstituted— and with haste— because affirmative action worked.

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