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Cutting the Mustard

Cutting the Mustard: Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence is a 1987 non-fiction book by civil libertarian and United States lawyer Marjorie Heins about the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and its relationship to affirmative action and sexism. Heins discusses the case of Nancy Richardson, dean of student affairs at the Boston University School of Theology, who was removed from her position by the school's administration in 1981. Heins represented Richardson in an unsuccessful lawsuit against Boston University for wrongful termination and sexism. Cutting the Mustard recounts the case, interspersing reflections on the lawsuit with a discussion of relevant case law, decisions by the Supreme Court of the United States related to affirmative action and multiple criticisms of contradictory court decisions in affirmative-action cases.

Cutting the Mustard
Book cover
AuthorMarjorie Heins
Original titleCutting the Mustard: Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectAffirmative action
GenreLaw
Published1987
PublisherFaber and Faber
Media typeHardcover
Pages213
ISBN978-0-571-12974-4
OCLC15653313
Preceded byStrictly Ghetto Property: The Story of Los Siete de la Raza 
Followed bySex, Sin, and Blasphemy: A Guide to America's Censorship Wars 

The book was positively received by the Harvard Law Review which recommended From Midterms to Ministry for further information. It was also reviewed by the Women's Review of Books, Women's Rights Law Reporter and California Lawyer. A review in Library Journal by a Harvard Law School librarian criticized the book for lacking a substantive analysis of the case.

Background edit

 
Heins at a 2009 National Coalition Against Censorship event

Marjorie Heins is an attorney with a focus on civil liberties.[1] She received her Bachelor of Arts degree from Cornell University in 1967[1] and graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, receiving her juris doctor degree in 1978.[1]

Before Cutting the Mustard, Heins' book Strictly Ghetto Property: The Story of Los Siete de la Raza was published in 1972.[2][3] Cutting the Mustard: Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence was first published in 1987.[4][5]

Content summary edit

Cutting the Mustard describes an unsuccessful case in which the author was involved as an attorney.[6] Boston University School of Theology dean of student affairs Nancy Richardson was removed from her position by the school's administration in 1981.[6][7] Heins (at the time, an American Civil Liberties Union attorney) represented Richardson in a lawsuit against the school alleging sexism.[6][7][8]

Richardson and the school had differing views on affirmative action; she supported the concept, opposing the administration's hiring strategy for minority candidates. Heins provides background, including management's failure to hire several key candidates. One was Beverly Harrison, a professor at Union Theological Seminary in New York who was supported by the majority of the school's professors. Boston University President John Silber and nine other faculty members interviewed Harrison for two hours, criticizing her support for feminism. School of Theology dean Richard Nesmith told the school's professors that Harrison's replies to questions from the ten faculty members in her interview were inadequate and she did not "cut the mustard".[8]

After the school did not hire Harrison, Richardson perceived a lack of support by school administration for women and minority faculty candidates. Associate Dean Nelle Slater was fired by Nesmith, who explained that the two did not "dance well".[8] Silber vetoed the appointment of Stephen Brech Reid, an African American academic supported by professors at the School of Theology. Nesmith and Silber then created a faculty position for white male sociologist Peter L. Berger, requesting input from students and professors (satisfying affirmative-action requirements) after deciding to give the job to Berger.[8]

Silber and Nesmith, who felt that affirmative action would lower academic hiring standards, triggered strife among students and faculty (including then-dean of students Nancy Richardson) at the School of Theology. Their opponents believed that affirmative action helped increase equality in a system developed by white men.[8] Richardson advocated affirmative action to Nesmith, arguing that it would not lower academic standards and the school's administration should reexamine its assumptions about race, women and minorities. Richardson was fired in 1981, with Nesmith attributing her termination to "pedagogical and ideological differences" with the administration.[8] Richardson sued, claiming discrimination by Boston University.[7] Heins provides a background of precedent established by prior cases (some of which contradict each other),[6][7] interspersed with discussions of Supreme Court decisions concerning affirmative action.[7]

Minority student admissions edit

Heins discusses the Supreme Court case Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, a landmark on affirmative action for minority students in university and college admissions. The case (decided in 1978) upheld affirmative action in the admission of minority students as one of several factors to consider, not the primary one. In the lawsuit, the affirmative-action standards at UC Davis School of Medicine were challenged; the school had a policy of holding 16 out of 100 slots for minorities in the incoming class of students, regardless of qualification. Potential student Allan Bakke, a qualified white applicant, challenged the practice after he was rejected by the school. In an opinion written by Justice Lewis F. Powell, Jr., the court ruled against racial quotas at the school while allowing minority status to remain one of several criteria in the admissions process.[8]

Minority hiring edit

The author contrasts Regents of the University of California v. Bakke with the Supreme Court's 1971 decision in Griggs v. Duke Power Co., which ruled that employers did not have to willfully discriminate against employees to violate Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger wrote that certain standardized tests given by employers could be discriminatory, even if that was not the employer's intent. Another case discussed by Heins is the 1980 Supreme Court decision in Fullilove v. Klutznick, wherein the court ruled constitutional a federal law requiring a percentage of funds for a building project to be used for minority workers.[8]

Sexual discrimination edit

The final Supreme Court cases discussed by Heins include the 1987 ruling in City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co. and the court's 1988 opinion in Watson v. Fort Worth Bank & Trust. The former was ruled unconstitutional as an affirmative-action structure in a business to support female employees, a decision with which Heins disagreed. Watson v. Fort Worth Bank & Trust followed that decision, finding that subjective employee analysis is subject to bias and requiring an explanation from the employer of how such analysis directly relates to job performance.[8]

Heins' verdict edit

After discussing Supreme Court precedent, Heins recounts the jury verdict which decided against her client by ruling that Richardson's firing was not illegal. Heins describes the trial chronologically, including the evidentiary process and testimony by witnesses. The jury's decision is examined; it found that Richardson sincerely believed that her school's administration practiced employment discrimination, and her criticism was made in good faith. However, the jury also determined that the administration did not fire Richardson because of this criticism. Heins critiques the compromise decision, contending that it reflects the bias of individual jurors rather than an interpretation of the law as applied to Richardson's firing by the school's administration. In post-trial interviews, the jurors explained they felt that it was the duty of employees (such as Richardson) respect their superiors and Nesmith was one such superior in his capacity as dean of the school of theology.[8]

Reception edit

The Harvard Law Review said, "In this timely book, the author uses her experiences in that trial to examine issues that still vex university faculties and presidents" (including academic qualifications for a position).[7] In the Tennessee Law Review Stephanie A. Levin wrote that Cutting the Mustard provided "a disturbing look at how ... standards are wielded to enforce conformity in the workplace",[9] citing the book in a discussion about nurturing and aggressive values and their respective places in the work environment.[9]

The Women's Rights Law Reporter gave the book a generally positive review, saying that its major drawback is an inadequate analysis of the jury's decision in the Richardson case.[8] The review concluded: "Cutting the Mustard succeeds in presenting the debate over affirmative action by questioning traditional assumptions about merit through an absorbing account of personnel decisions at Boston University's School of Theology". Although Heins describes Richardson's trial, the reviewer felt that she does not analyze the case in the larger political context.[8]

Traci C. West discussed the Richardson case in a section of the book, From Midterms to Ministry, criticizing it for insufficient information about conflicts at Boston University.[10] A review of Cutting the Mustard also appeared in the Women's Review of Books.[11]

California Lawyer criticized Heins' objectivity, noting that she did not adequately explain why Richardson's case was lost.[12] In a Library Journal review, Harvard Law School librarian Susan E. Parker wrote that the book was "essential for followers of the case, but others [cases] deserve more substantive discussion."[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c . The Free Expression Policy Project. fepproject.org. 2014. Archived from the original on September 6, 2015. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
  2. ^ Heins, Marjorie (1972). Strictly Ghetto Property: The Story of Los Siete de la Raza. Ramparts Press. ISBN 978-0-87867-010-9.
  3. ^ Online Computer Library Center (2014). "Strictly Ghetto Property: The Story of Los Siete de la Raza". WorldCat. OCLC 554280.
  4. ^ Minnow, Martha (November 1988). "Book review: Speaking of silence". University of Miami Law Review. 43. University of Miami: 493.
  5. ^ Brodin, Mark S. (1990). "Accuracy, efficiency, and accountability in the litigation process – the case for the fact verdict". University of Cincinnati Law Review. 59. University of Cincinnati: 15.
  6. ^ a b c d e Susan E. Parker, Harvard Law School Library (1988). "Book review: Cutting the Mustard". Library Journal. Reed Business Information, Inc.
  7. ^ a b c d e f "Recent publication: Cutting the Mustard: Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence. By Marjorie Heins". Harvard Law Review. 101: 1986. June 1988.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Klein, Hilary B. (1989). "Book Review: Cutting the Mustard: Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence by Marjorie Heins". Women's Rights Law Reporter. 11 (1). Rutgers University; Accessed via HeinOnline: 61. ISSN 0085-8269.
  9. ^ a b Levin, Stephanie A. (Spring 1992). "Women, peace, and violence: A new perspective". Tennessee Law Review. 59: 611.
  10. ^ West, Traci C. (2008). "Learning to Build Christian Community: Males, Whites, Heterosexuals Wanted for Leadership". In Allan Hugh Cole (ed.). From Midterms to Ministry: Practical Theologians on Pastoral Beginnings. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. pp. 240–245. ISBN 978-0-8028-4002-8.
  11. ^ "Cutting the Mustard". Women's Review of Books. 6 (88): 10.
  12. ^ Chamberlin, Leslie (1988). "Cutting the Mustard: Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence by Marjorie Heins". California Lawyer. 8: 59.

Further reading edit

  • Bacchi, Carol Lee (1996). The Politics of Affirmative Action: 'Women', Equality and Category Politics. SAGE Publications Ltd. ISBN 978-0-8039-8792-0.
  • Bergmann, Barbara R. (1996). In Defense Of Affirmative Action. BasicBooks. ISBN 0-465-09833-9.
  • Bumiller, Kristin (1988). The Civil Rights Society: The Social Construction of Victims. The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-3544-5.
  • Caplan, Paula J. (1993). Lifting a Ton of Feathers: Woman's Guide to Surviving in the Academic World Hardcover. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-2903-4.
  • Clayton, Susan D.; Faye J. Crosby (1992). Justice, Gender, and Affirmative Action. Critical Perspectives on Women and Gender. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-06464-9.
  • Hancock, Linda (1999). Women, Public Policy and the State. Macmillan Education Australia. ISBN 978-0-7329-5531-1.

External links edit

  • : Authors – Heins, Marjorie

cutting, mustard, idiom, mustard, affirmative, action, nature, excellence, 1987, fiction, book, civil, libertarian, united, states, lawyer, marjorie, heins, about, equal, protection, clause, fourteenth, amendment, united, states, constitution, relationship, af. For the idiom see Cut the mustard Cutting the Mustard Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence is a 1987 non fiction book by civil libertarian and United States lawyer Marjorie Heins about the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and its relationship to affirmative action and sexism Heins discusses the case of Nancy Richardson dean of student affairs at the Boston University School of Theology who was removed from her position by the school s administration in 1981 Heins represented Richardson in an unsuccessful lawsuit against Boston University for wrongful termination and sexism Cutting the Mustard recounts the case interspersing reflections on the lawsuit with a discussion of relevant case law decisions by the Supreme Court of the United States related to affirmative action and multiple criticisms of contradictory court decisions in affirmative action cases Cutting the MustardBook coverAuthorMarjorie HeinsOriginal titleCutting the Mustard Affirmative Action and the Nature of ExcellenceCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSubjectAffirmative actionGenreLawPublished1987PublisherFaber and FaberMedia typeHardcoverPages213ISBN978 0 571 12974 4OCLC15653313Preceded byStrictly Ghetto Property The Story of Los Siete de la Raza Followed bySex Sin and Blasphemy A Guide to America s Censorship Wars The book was positively received by the Harvard Law Review which recommended From Midterms to Ministry for further information It was also reviewed by the Women s Review of Books Women s Rights Law Reporter and California Lawyer A review in Library Journal by a Harvard Law School librarian criticized the book for lacking a substantive analysis of the case Contents 1 Background 2 Content summary 2 1 Minority student admissions 2 2 Minority hiring 2 3 Sexual discrimination 2 4 Heins verdict 3 Reception 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBackground edit nbsp Heins at a 2009 National Coalition Against Censorship eventMarjorie Heins is an attorney with a focus on civil liberties 1 She received her Bachelor of Arts degree from Cornell University in 1967 1 and graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School receiving her juris doctor degree in 1978 1 Before Cutting the Mustard Heins book Strictly Ghetto Property The Story of Los Siete de la Raza was published in 1972 2 3 Cutting the Mustard Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence was first published in 1987 4 5 Content summary editCutting the Mustard describes an unsuccessful case in which the author was involved as an attorney 6 Boston University School of Theology dean of student affairs Nancy Richardson was removed from her position by the school s administration in 1981 6 7 Heins at the time an American Civil Liberties Union attorney represented Richardson in a lawsuit against the school alleging sexism 6 7 8 Richardson and the school had differing views on affirmative action she supported the concept opposing the administration s hiring strategy for minority candidates Heins provides background including management s failure to hire several key candidates One was Beverly Harrison a professor at Union Theological Seminary in New York who was supported by the majority of the school s professors Boston University President John Silber and nine other faculty members interviewed Harrison for two hours criticizing her support for feminism School of Theology dean Richard Nesmith told the school s professors that Harrison s replies to questions from the ten faculty members in her interview were inadequate and she did not cut the mustard 8 After the school did not hire Harrison Richardson perceived a lack of support by school administration for women and minority faculty candidates Associate Dean Nelle Slater was fired by Nesmith who explained that the two did not dance well 8 Silber vetoed the appointment of Stephen Brech Reid an African American academic supported by professors at the School of Theology Nesmith and Silber then created a faculty position for white male sociologist Peter L Berger requesting input from students and professors satisfying affirmative action requirements after deciding to give the job to Berger 8 Silber and Nesmith who felt that affirmative action would lower academic hiring standards triggered strife among students and faculty including then dean of students Nancy Richardson at the School of Theology Their opponents believed that affirmative action helped increase equality in a system developed by white men 8 Richardson advocated affirmative action to Nesmith arguing that it would not lower academic standards and the school s administration should reexamine its assumptions about race women and minorities Richardson was fired in 1981 with Nesmith attributing her termination to pedagogical and ideological differences with the administration 8 Richardson sued claiming discrimination by Boston University 7 Heins provides a background of precedent established by prior cases some of which contradict each other 6 7 interspersed with discussions of Supreme Court decisions concerning affirmative action 7 Minority student admissions edit Heins discusses the Supreme Court case Regents of the University of California v Bakke a landmark on affirmative action for minority students in university and college admissions The case decided in 1978 upheld affirmative action in the admission of minority students as one of several factors to consider not the primary one In the lawsuit the affirmative action standards at UC Davis School of Medicine were challenged the school had a policy of holding 16 out of 100 slots for minorities in the incoming class of students regardless of qualification Potential student Allan Bakke a qualified white applicant challenged the practice after he was rejected by the school In an opinion written by Justice Lewis F Powell Jr the court ruled against racial quotas at the school while allowing minority status to remain one of several criteria in the admissions process 8 Minority hiring edit The author contrasts Regents of the University of California v Bakke with the Supreme Court s 1971 decision in Griggs v Duke Power Co which ruled that employers did not have to willfully discriminate against employees to violate Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 Chief Justice Warren E Burger wrote that certain standardized tests given by employers could be discriminatory even if that was not the employer s intent Another case discussed by Heins is the 1980 Supreme Court decision in Fullilove v Klutznick wherein the court ruled constitutional a federal law requiring a percentage of funds for a building project to be used for minority workers 8 Sexual discrimination edit The final Supreme Court cases discussed by Heins include the 1987 ruling in City of Richmond v J A Croson Co and the court s 1988 opinion in Watson v Fort Worth Bank amp Trust The former was ruled unconstitutional as an affirmative action structure in a business to support female employees a decision with which Heins disagreed Watson v Fort Worth Bank amp Trust followed that decision finding that subjective employee analysis is subject to bias and requiring an explanation from the employer of how such analysis directly relates to job performance 8 Heins verdict edit After discussing Supreme Court precedent Heins recounts the jury verdict which decided against her client by ruling that Richardson s firing was not illegal Heins describes the trial chronologically including the evidentiary process and testimony by witnesses The jury s decision is examined it found that Richardson sincerely believed that her school s administration practiced employment discrimination and her criticism was made in good faith However the jury also determined that the administration did not fire Richardson because of this criticism Heins critiques the compromise decision contending that it reflects the bias of individual jurors rather than an interpretation of the law as applied to Richardson s firing by the school s administration In post trial interviews the jurors explained they felt that it was the duty of employees such as Richardson respect their superiors and Nesmith was one such superior in his capacity as dean of the school of theology 8 Reception editThe Harvard Law Review said In this timely book the author uses her experiences in that trial to examine issues that still vex university faculties and presidents including academic qualifications for a position 7 In the Tennessee Law Review Stephanie A Levin wrote that Cutting the Mustard provided a disturbing look at how standards are wielded to enforce conformity in the workplace 9 citing the book in a discussion about nurturing and aggressive values and their respective places in the work environment 9 The Women s Rights Law Reporter gave the book a generally positive review saying that its major drawback is an inadequate analysis of the jury s decision in the Richardson case 8 The review concluded Cutting the Mustard succeeds in presenting the debate over affirmative action by questioning traditional assumptions about merit through an absorbing account of personnel decisions at Boston University s School of Theology Although Heins describes Richardson s trial the reviewer felt that she does not analyze the case in the larger political context 8 Traci C West discussed the Richardson case in a section of the book From Midterms to Ministry criticizing it for insufficient information about conflicts at Boston University 10 A review of Cutting the Mustard also appeared in the Women s Review of Books 11 California Lawyer criticized Heins objectivity noting that she did not adequately explain why Richardson s case was lost 12 In a Library Journal review Harvard Law School librarian Susan E Parker wrote that the book was essential for followers of the case but others cases deserve more substantive discussion 6 See also editAffirmative action in the United States Fisher v University of Texas 2013 Equal Protection ClauseReferences edit a b c Marjorie Heins Bio The Free Expression Policy Project fepproject org 2014 Archived from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved February 9 2014 Heins Marjorie 1972 Strictly Ghetto Property The Story of Los Siete de la Raza Ramparts Press ISBN 978 0 87867 010 9 Online Computer Library Center 2014 Strictly Ghetto Property The Story of Los Siete de la Raza WorldCat OCLC 554280 Minnow Martha November 1988 Book review Speaking of silence University of Miami Law Review 43 University of Miami 493 Brodin Mark S 1990 Accuracy efficiency and accountability in the litigation process the case for the fact verdict University of Cincinnati Law Review 59 University of Cincinnati 15 a b c d e Susan E Parker Harvard Law School Library 1988 Book review Cutting the Mustard Library Journal Reed Business Information Inc a b c d e f Recent publication Cutting the Mustard Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence By Marjorie Heins Harvard Law Review 101 1986 June 1988 a b c d e f g h i j k l Klein Hilary B 1989 Book Review Cutting the Mustard Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence by Marjorie Heins Women s Rights Law Reporter 11 1 Rutgers University Accessed via HeinOnline 61 ISSN 0085 8269 a b Levin Stephanie A Spring 1992 Women peace and violence A new perspective Tennessee Law Review 59 611 West Traci C 2008 Learning to Build Christian Community Males Whites Heterosexuals Wanted for Leadership In Allan Hugh Cole ed From Midterms to Ministry Practical Theologians on Pastoral Beginnings Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Co pp 240 245 ISBN 978 0 8028 4002 8 Cutting the Mustard Women s Review of Books 6 88 10 Chamberlin Leslie 1988 Cutting the Mustard Affirmative Action and the Nature of Excellence by Marjorie Heins California Lawyer 8 59 Further reading editBacchi Carol Lee 1996 The Politics of Affirmative Action Women Equality and Category Politics SAGE Publications Ltd ISBN 978 0 8039 8792 0 Bergmann Barbara R 1996 In Defense Of Affirmative Action BasicBooks ISBN 0 465 09833 9 Bumiller Kristin 1988 The Civil Rights Society The Social Construction of Victims The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 3544 5 Caplan Paula J 1993 Lifting a Ton of Feathers Woman s Guide to Surviving in the Academic World Hardcover University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 2903 4 Clayton Susan D Faye J Crosby 1992 Justice Gender and Affirmative Action Critical Perspectives on Women and Gender University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 06464 9 Hancock Linda 1999 Women Public Policy and the State Macmillan Education Australia ISBN 978 0 7329 5531 1 External links editNYU Press Authors Heins Marjorie Portals nbsp Books nbsp Education nbsp Journalism nbsp Language nbsp Law nbsp Society nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cutting the Mustard amp oldid 1054573289, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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