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Diversity a little like "community" or indeed "affirmative action" itself is one of those warm and fuzzy things that are hard to oppose, but even harder to define.
Indeed, affirmative action as we know it is probably doomed: voters have banned it at universities in at least eight states, and four more look likely to follow suit.
Indeed, affirmative action is such a messy and controversial subject that President Obama's White House has barely uttered a word about this new episode, and neither Democratic nor Republican leaders, in this presidential campaign cycle, want to touch it either.
Even a simple concept like "yes" might be expressed in dozens of different ways — including "yes," "ya," "yup," "yeah," "yeayuh," "yeppers," "yessirree," "aye, aye," "mmmhmm," "uh-huh," "sure," "totally," "certainly," "indeed," "affirmative," "fine," "definitely," "you bet," "you betcha," "no problemo," and "okeydoke" — and what's the rule in that?
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Strange times indeed: when affirmative action is on the cards for those at the top, while equality is reined back for everyone else.
This paper shows that the answer indeed is affirmative and inspires also new ways of looking at old problems in quasi-triangular spaces.
It is indeed difficult to reconcile affirmative action with the nation's manifest ideals of individualism and merit-based competition.
Indeed, the caste-based affirmative action here raises questions for nations like Brazil and Malaysia that have adopted anti-discrimination programs that are in some ways similar to India's.
Indeed, just as the term affirmative action has made its way into Korean political discourse, borrowed directly from the United States, so has its rhetorical opposite, reverse discrimination.
Similar programs pegged to a set percentage, which were established in Texas and California to salvage some vestige of affirmative action, have indeed raised minority admissions.
Although the weight of authority at the moment appears to be on the side of those who find that affirmative action does, indeed, benefit its intended beneficiaries, the matter is still open to debate.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com