With the Supreme Court set to hand down decisions on both affirmative action and voting rights this week, civil rights advocates are anxious over the future of efforts to create greater equality in society.
The two cases, Fisher v. the University of Texas at Austin and Shelby County v. Holder, could fundamentally change the level of access non-white residents of the US have to participation in the democratic process and higher education.
“This year the Supreme Court justices will determine if…the power to effect change, will be endangered,” NAACP president Ben Jealous wrote of the Shelby County case in an article for theGrio.
If the Supreme Court rules that all racially-conscious admissions policies are not constitutional, years of work by public universities to ensure diversity in their student bodies and to address the gap between educational resources between white and non-white communities could face setbacks.
“Because the state of opportunity is not great right now, to take away the tool of race-conscious admissions would be counterproductive,” Damon Hewitt, director of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Education Practice Group told msnbc.
Based on the questions the Supreme Court justices asked at oral arguments in February, experts believe the court is likely to order some change to the law, although there is no way to know how broad the ruling will be. The court could throw out the 2003 decision that allows for some consideration of race in admissions decisions as long as the goal is to reach a “critical mass” of diversity, although a more narrow ruling that deals specifically with UT-Austin’s policy of automatically admitting the top 10% of each state high school’s graduating class is also possible.
The NAACP’s Hewitt points out that existing examples in California suggest that removing racially-conscious admissions would mean fewer minority students get access to higher education. In California, since the 1996 passage of a ballot initiative that banned considering race in college admissions, campuses have become more segregated even though diversity throughout the system has increased thanks to demographic changes.









