The history and evolution of Title IX regulations demonstrate the ease with which civil rights law can take aim at private life and beliefs.
R. Shep Melnick
Decades after Brown, the principles underlying desegregation remain a matter of substantial debate.
When you are confident that you are on the side of the angels, why worry about procedural constraints?
Justice Deferred usefully lays out the conventional wisdom of mainstream civil rights advocates. But it avoids the hard questions.
Is it any surprise that agencies look for ways to avoid rulemaking?
Murray makes a convincing case that we cannot begin to address the challenges of race without first confronting reality.
Once you create a picture of a world in which unalloyed good hangs by a thread in the face of an alien evil, you are already boarding Flight 93.
The regulatory attack on stereotyping has been extended to an assault on almost all conventional understandings of sex, sex differences, and sexuality.
Title IX compliance offices are engaged in relatively open political indoctrination as well as subtle efforts to curtail freedom of speech.
R. Shep Melnick is the Thomas P. O’Neill, Jr. Professor of American Politics at Boston College and author of The Transformation of Title IX: Regulating Gender Equality in Education (Brookings Institution Press, 2018).