SCOOP: The American Bar Association is poised to mandate diversity training and affirmative action at all of its accredited law schools, a move top legal scholars say could jeopardize academic freedom and force schools to violate federal law.

Yes, really. freebeacon.com/campus/america…
The ABA accredits nearly every law school in the US. It is is mulling a plan that would require schools to "provide education" on "cross-cultural competency," including a mandatory ethics course instructing students that they have an obligation to fight "racism in the law."
Schools would also be required to "take effective actions" to "diversify" their student bodies—even when doing so risks violating a law that "purports to prohibit consideration of" race or ethnicity.

In order to remain accredited, law schools might have to break the law.
The proposal has sparked fierce blowback from legal scholars across the country, including 10 emeritus professors at Yale Law School, who called it a "problematic" and "disturbing" attempt to "institutionalize dogma" through the accreditation process. americanbar.org/content/dam/ab…
Violating federal law is "not legally defensible conduct for any institution," the Yale scholars wrote in a public comment on the plan in June, nor is it "a legally defensible requirement by an organization certifying law schools."
Those arguments have so far fallen on deaf ears: When the plan was submitted for final review on Aug. 16, it contained all of the provisions to which the Yale professors had objected.
Few accreditors are as influential as the American Bar Association. There are fewer than 250 law schools in the United States, and 199 of them are accredited by the association. In most states, attending an ABA-accredited school is a prerequisite for taking the bar exam.
So when the ABA sets standards for law schools, it sets them for the entire legal system: corporate lawyers, criminal prosecutors, state judges, and SCOTUS justices will all be educated in whatever ideology the ABA dictates—even if it is indifferent to the rule of law itself.
The proposed standards would institutionalize that indifference throughout legal academia. Laws prohibiting schools from considering race in admissions are "not a justification for a school's non-compliance" with the diversity requirement, one standard reads.
According to the Yale professors, "It would appear that [this language] instructs schools to risk violating state or federal law in order to retain certification."
Though the plan does tell schools to pursue diversity "by means other than those prohibited," it never specifies what those means are, an omission the Yale professors say could encourage legally dubious activities. taxprof.typepad.com/files/aba-coun…
Such activities might include using "personal ratings" to establish unofficial racial quotas, a practice that has landed Harvard in the Supreme Court. Though schools can use race as a "plus factor" in admissions, they cannot set hard floors or ceilings for any demographic group
The ABA’s accreditation plan would encourage law schools to set racial ceilings anyway, through the same sort of chicanery Harvard allegedly employs.

It would also encourage students to see existing law as illegitimate.
The plan mandates a course on "professional responsibility" that stresses lawyers' "obligation" to fight racism in the legal system—implying the legal system is racist—and requires students to learn about "bias, cross-cultural competency, and racism."
"Courses on racism and bias in the law" are one way of satisfying that second requirement. Insofar as this curriculum assumes the law is unjust, it supplies a justification for disobeying it.
The curricular mandates have elicited fierce pushback from law professors. Brian Leiter of the University of Chicago Law School told the American Bar Association that its plan would "almost certainly violate the academic freedom rights of faculty at many (probably most) schools."
Kate Stith, a professor and former dean at Yale Law, was even more blunt, calling the proposal a "shocking" act of overreach. "It is totally inappropriate for a group like the American Bar Association to intrude into the content of law school curricula," she told the Free Beacon.
The most shocking thing about the proposal may be Yale's intense institutional opposition to it. Yale Law School has one of the most leftwing faculties in the country, with fewer self-identified conservatives than Stanford, Harvard, or the University of Chicago law schools.
YLS also has one of the most progressive student bodies of any law school: Earlier this year, a raft of affinity groups demanded that the Yale Law Journal "prioritize anti-racism" in its admissions process, falsely alleging that minorities were underrepresented on the masthead.
The demands plunged the journal into chaos and led its former editor—himself a minority and a proponent of affirmative action—to apologize for the "unwelcoming culture" he had presided over.

freebeacon.com/campus/yale-la…

freebeacon.com/campus/yale-la…
Yale's emeritus professors seemed to have had such uprisings in mind when they drafted their comment. They point to the ABA's endorsement of "affinity groups"—the same institutions that had launched the crusade against the Yale Law Journal—as an example of ideological overreach.
"Affinity groups are by definition non-diverse," the comment reads. "There are good faith differences of opinion about whether some affinity group programs support or detract from diversity goals."
If the American Bar Association presses ahead with its plan, those programs could soon be a prerequisite for practicing law in the United States.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Aaron Sibarium

Aaron Sibarium Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @aaronsibarium

7 Sep
To ban CRT IS to ban telling minority kids that their society views them as trash.
To Noah’s more serious point, yes, you do need an alternative narrative. But narrative is the key word. The alternative to CRT is not going to tell “the whole story”, any more than CRT will. What we’re really debating is which set of omissions/distortions is the least bad.
Is colorblind 90s liberalism optimal? Maybe not!

But to say “it has blind spots and limits” isn’t a counterargument. The same could be said, just as convincingly, of CRT.
Read 4 tweets
7 Sep
Remember that "inclusive communication" guide the CDC put out the other week? The agency didn't have to do very much work on it. Instead, it drew on a network of nonprofits that are institutionalizing progressivism as public health’s lingua franca.

freebeacon.com/biden-administ…
The guide included statements like "health equity is intersectional" and described "diabetics" and "the homeless" as "dehumanizing language." Public health communications, it said, "should reflect and speak to the needs of" a wide range of identities.
For example, "assigned male/female at birth" is preferable to "biologically male/female," according to the guide—which also stresses that public health officials should "avoid jargon and use straightforward, easy to understand language." cdc.gov/healthcommunic…
Read 21 tweets
16 Aug
Remember Rodney Glasgow, the private school administrator who compared critics of CRT to the Capitol rioters?

His diversity consulting group has penetrated every level of the accreditation bureaucracy, creating a patronage network for woke administrators. freebeacon.com/culture/the-lu…
Every one of the Glasgow Group's consultants has ties to the National Association of Independent Schools, and a few have ties to the association's approved accreditors. That gives the 12-person firm an outsized say in what hundreds of thousands of private school students learn.
As those students' education has been shaped by the Glasgow Group's consultants, diversity professionals have procured more and more power—and more and more money.

Much of that money comes from the "equity audits" schools purchase to comply with woke accreditation standards.
Read 29 tweets
28 Jul
Many conservatives have framed school choice as the solution to wokeism in public schools. There's just one problem: all the private school are woke too.

Is that the result of the free market? No. It's the result of a woke accreditation cartel.

freebeacon.com/culture/why-pr…
One of the people involved in the accreditation cartel is Rodney Glasgow. In May, Glasgow likened parents upset about wokeness to the "white supremacists" who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6—and the schools that had admitted their kids to the police officers who "opened the gate."
Glasgow is no stranger to gatekeeping: He has held multiple positions with the National Association of Independent Schools, which sets accreditation standards for a group of more than 1,600 American private schools, several of which you've probably heard of.
Read 28 tweets
24 Jul
A proposed bill in Nebraska would mandate that schools teach 9th graders that abortion is “reproductive justice.” Surely those opposed to banning CRT will speak out against this outrageous act of compelled speech.

freebeacon.com/culture/meet-t…
Even if these bills are legal in a narrow sense, they contradict the spirit of free speech and open inquiry we should cultivate in K-12 schools. Right?
Frankly teaching kids that abortion is “reproductive justice”—as if any pro-lifer is inherently unjust—may be even more outrageous and Orwellian than the spirit murder crap.
Read 4 tweets
14 Jul
We keep hearing that Ibram Kendi and Robin DiAngelo aren't REAL critical race theory, that the excesses of anti-racist education are separate from CRT.

Wrong.

You can trace all of Kendi and DiAngelo's ideas straight back to the seminal texts of CRT. freebeacon.com/culture/how-cr…
There are indeed some differences between critical race theory and the new racial orthodoxy. But the main premises of that orthodoxy—all racial disparities are illegitimate, unconscious bias is everywhere, racist speech is violence—all stem from critical race theory.
CRT is essentially a synthesis of Kendi and DiAngelo. Though neither figure is a critical race theorist, each has helped to popularize CRT's underlying worldview, one in which structural and subconscious racism are intimately intertwined.
Read 30 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(