Illiberal Education: The Politics of Race and Sex on Campus.

AuthorWeisberg, Jacob

Illiberal Education: The Politics of Race and Sex on Campus. Dinesh D'Souza. Free Press, 19.95. If you live in a cave and have missed the fuss about "political correctness" on campus, this book will bring you up to speed. The author, an alumnus of Dartmouth College and the Reagan White House, describes with clarity and fair-mindedness the recent disputes at six elite universities. In D'Souza's view, the common thread in the fights over the Western canon at Stanford, free expression at Michigan, race-based faculty hiring at Duke, and a number of other conflicts is what he calls the victims' revolution."

D'Souza adduces some disturbing evidence in support of his thesis that misguided efforts to compensate for past injustice have contributed to a harsh climate of intolerance and intimidation. In some extreme cases, blind pursuit of "diversity" has caused administrators to adopt grotesquely disparate sets of admissions standards for different racial groups. These policies usually don't help their intended beneficiaries, since unqualified blacks and Hispanics are admitted even when there is little hope that they will be able to do the work demanded of them.

D'Souza makes a compelling case against affirmative action as it is practiced at American universities like Berkeley. Where he overreaches, in my opinion, is in blaming...

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