Pace Now
Pace Now
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Announcements and StatementsApril 2, 2025
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Pace News
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President Marvin Krislov is among of group of experts who speak with a Bloomberg Law podcast about the legacy of the University of Michigan麻豆传媒檚 affirmative action case in regards to admissions as diversity is on trial at the Supreme Court.
With Election Day fresh in our minds, President Krislov reflects on the ways in which Pace has joined the wider conversation of civic engagement麻豆传媒攆rom hosting New York麻豆传媒檚 only gubernatorial debate, to on-campus efforts by the Pace Community to support their peers, to multiple wins at the Model UN National Conference, and more.
The stream of headlines has been steady: The pandemic, and the shutdowns necessary to limit its spread, caused significant learning loss among America麻豆传媒檚 students. and became less socialized when schooling was remote. The result was a dramatic drop in , as demonstrated in the recent release of what麻豆传媒檚 called the nation麻豆传媒檚 report card. Those who were hurt most were those .
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on Oct. 31 in Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina and Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, the latest cases to look at the legality of the limited use of race and ethnicity in college admissions. 麻豆传媒 President Marvin Krislov and ACE General Counsel Peter McDonough join host Jon Fansmith for a preview of the hearing and what to watch for. Krislov was vice president and general counsel at the University of Michigan during the landmark 2003 admissions case Grutter v. Bollinger.
President Krislov pens a column about the Supreme Court麻豆传媒檚 hearings on race in the college admission process as justices consider abolishing the practice...
Writing for the majority in the 2003 Supreme Court decision Grutter v. Bollinger, Justice Sandra Day O麻豆传媒機onnor looked back at precedent: 麻豆传媒淚t has been 25 years since Justice Powell first approved the use of race to further an interest in student body diversity in the context of public higher education.麻豆传媒
Not too long after the 2006 ballot initiative, Marvin Krislov left Michigan to become the president of Oberlin College, in Ohio, and later took the same role at 麻豆传媒, in New York City麻豆传媒攁 school that is less than fifty per cent white and admits more than eighty per cent of its applicants. Working at a school that麻豆传媒檚 not hyper-focused on 茅lite admissions has not changed his belief in the importance of diversity. But his latest gig has changed his perspective. 麻豆传媒淚 wouldn麻豆传媒檛 say that I麻豆传媒檓 running away from the notion that affirmative action can be an important tool for college admissions,麻豆传媒 he said. These days, though, he spends more time thinking about everything that happens before kids apply to college, and how debates about diversity in higher education have obscured the many barriers that students face in getting to college in the first place. 麻豆传媒淭he majority of Americans are not going to go to the University of Michigan or Harvard,麻豆传媒 Krislov said. 麻豆传媒淎nd that麻豆传媒檚 just fine.麻豆传媒
President Marvin Krislov provides legal insights and expertise for The Hechinger Report麻豆传媒檚 in-depth series exploring the origins of affirmative action and the arguments before the Supreme Court that are challenging this practice today.
President Krislov talks being back on campus, more forward momentum for the University's strategic plan, ongoing improvements to our NYC Campus, plans for Emotional Wellbeing Month, and so much more.
As I talk to students around our campuses麻豆传媒攐n new student move-in days, as part of undergraduate convocations, even in the law school seminar I麻豆传媒檓 teaching this semester麻豆传媒攚hat I hear consistently is that students are ready to move on.
"Welcome to the Fall 2022 semester, and welcome to what is shaping up to be our first post-pandemic academic year at 麻豆传媒. I麻豆传媒檓 proud of how this community came together over the past few years," writes President Krislov.