Small Business Resources, Business Advice and Forms from AllBusiness.com

What Brown V. Board Of Education Should Have Said

By Balkin, Jack M.
Publication: Kirkus Reviews
Date: Wednesday, August 1 2001
Justice, for a day.
Balkin's concept is so brilliantly obvious that it's amazing no one's tried it before: He's snared nine prominent legal academics, given them a politically juicy case (Brown v. Board of Education, which declared school segregation unconstitutional), limited them to

the materials available in 1954, and told them to come up with the opinions they would have produced if they'd been members of the Court. The resulting pastiche is, for the most part, invigorating. Freed by the anachronism of mid-century role-playing, the eminent professors who write here are forced actually to write. The three judges from Yale—Balkin, former Solicitor General Drew Days, and media hound Bruce Ackerman—concur and form the plurality. Their opinions, commonly rooted in a revival of the "citizenship" and "privileges and immunities" clauses of the 14th Amendment, are very much Yale opinions: brilliant, subtle, technically masterful, and totally divorced from reality. The old-line liberals—Frank Michelman. John Hart Ely, and feminist Catharine MacKinnon—take a different approach: they skip over legal niceties and resort to overarching "principles," whether of equal membership in the civil community, anti-subordination, or the simple conviction that the "separate but equal" rationale of Plessy v. Ferguson is wrong. The last three stray furthest from the opinion of the Court. Michael McConnell strives to locate an intent to desegregate among the ratifiers of the 14th Amendment themselves, but his historical approach ultimately feels forced, a case of ideology shoved before reason. Cass Sunstein, to general embarrassment, tries to revive the concept of substantive due process. But it's Derrick Bell, the sole dissenter, who provides the real fireworks. Bell, who supervised the NAACP's school desegregation cases for five years, identifies Brown as a dead end, a piece of conceptual wallpaper that overestimates the power of law and understates the depth and pervasiveness of racism. His solution sounds more realistic than anything the rest of the judiciary has come up with.
Passionate, intelligent, accessible, and eloquent. If only the real court would follow suit.

In addition, make sure to read these articles:

  • American icon: Does it matter what the court said in Brown?
  • WHAT BROWN V. BOARD OFEDUCATION SHOULD HAVE SAID. Jack M. Balkin, ed.^ New York: New York University Press, 2001. Pp. xii, 257. $45.^^ What should ......
  • Plessy as "Passing": Judicial Responses to Ambiguously Raced Bodies in Plessy v. Ferguson
  • HEADNOTE The Supreme Court's decision in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) is infamous for its doctrine of "separate but equal," which gave constitutional legitimacy to Jim ......
  • The Court and Social Context in Civil Rights History
  • The Court and Social Context in Civil Rights History From Jim Crow to Civil Rights: The Supreme Court and the Struggle for Racial Equality, Michael ......
  • INTRODUCTORY REMARKS
  • Despite debates about judicial activism and judicial restraint, courts do not initiate cases. In relation to the active litigants and the lawyers who bring cases ......
  • Some Memories Of A Long Life, 1854-1911
  • Recently discovered in the Library of Congress, a previously unpublished memoir by the wife of Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan, revealed here as a ......
  • Separate And Unequal
  • In 1892, writes Fireside (Emeritus/Ithaca College; Brown v. Board of Education, 1994), an octoroon—that is, one-eighth black—Louisianan named Homer Plessy refused to relinquish his seat ......
  • Black Trials
  • Weiner brings appropriate credentials to this daunting endeavor of writing social, legal, cultural, and racial history: a Ph.D. in American studies as well as a ......
  • REMARKS OF NICHOLAS de B. KATZENBACH[dagger]
  • It is interesting to look back on Brown v. Board of Education,1 one of the great decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, ......
  • Sarah's Long Walk
  • The Sarah Roberts case will be unfamiliar to most Americans, and all its principal participants, with the possible exception of abolitionist lawyer (and later Senator) ......
  • American Nightmare
  • From popular historian Packard (Victoria's Daughters, 1998, etc.), a chronicle of the growth and decline of America's infamous Jim Crow laws, which enforced racial segregation....
  • Minding the Law
  • Minding the Law, by Anthony Amsterdam and Jerome Bruner. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2000. 553 pp. The heart of this thoughtful book is a ......
  • From the Editor
  • I write this introduction after more than a year serving as editor of Law & Society Review. The past year has been an interesting and ......
  • Under Supreme attack: High Court decisions could erode hard-fought gains.
  • Black America faces a new Jim Crow era. Nearly 100 years after the Supreme Court in Plessy v. Ferguson ruled "separate but equal" accommodations constitutional, ......
  • Legal Pragmatism Defended
  • The book ostensibly reviewed by my distinguished academic colleague Richard Epstein1-Law, Pragmatism, and Democracy-offers pragmatic accounts both of adjudication and of democracy.2 Epstein, no fan ......
  • Mark Levin: Cut the Court Down to Size
  • During the Reagan Administration, Mark Levin served as chief of staff to Atty. Gen. Ed Meese. Today, he is president of the Landmark Legal Foundation ......