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2 standards for diversity in the legal fraternity
Minneapolis Star Tribune ^
| September 07, 2006
| Katherine Kersten
Posted on 09/07/2006 3:24:49 PM PDT by rhema
The Minneapolis law firm of Maslon, Edelman, Borman and Brand knows a lot about the struggle against discrimination. The firm was founded 50 years ago by Jewish attorneys who couldn't get jobs elsewhere. The Maslon firm has plenty of civil rights laurels. In the 1970s it led the lawsuit that produced a desegregation order involving the Minneapolis public schools. In 2005 it won a gender equity award from the Minnesota State Bar Association. And it is one of the state's few large law firms headed by a woman.
So in 1997 it seemed natural for Maslon attorneys to represent students who believed they were being excluded from the University of Michigan and its law school because of their race. The cases turned on classic constitutional principles of equality before the law. Both went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Lawyers who take on cases such as this usually gain the admiration of their peers. But today, Maslon -- whose attorneys donated their time to crusade for equal rights -- is being shunned in important centers of power.
The rub? The students Maslon represented on grounds of race-based exclusion were white.
The backlash came in early 2006, when Maslon applied to join Twin Cities Diversity in Practice, a consortium of nine major corporations and 19 law firms interested in recruiting and hiring minority attorneys. Maslon's admission should have been a slam dunk. But its application was tabled after objections were raised. Months later, the firm is still in limbo.
Terri Krivosha, chairwoman of Maslon's governance committee, says she was stunned by the decision to defer the firm's application because it had represented particular clients.
Who's behind the effort to tar and feather Maslon? A principal player is the Minnesota Association of Black Lawyers (MABL). Jerry Blackwell, then the association's
(Excerpt) Read more at startribune.com ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; US: Minnesota
KEYWORDS: diversity; hypocrites; moralabsolutes; racism; skindisease
1
posted on
09/07/2006 3:24:51 PM PDT
by
rhema
To: Caleb1411
Peter Swanson is a black Twin Cities attorney who was instrumental in bringing this sorry episode to light. He sees a larger problem with the two organizations' views on race. "They seem to promote a stereotype that all members of certain racial groups think alike," he says. "Apparently, these organizations aren't interested in diversity. They are not interested in recruiting and retaining all minority lawyers -- just the ones with the proper attitudes."
2
posted on
09/07/2006 3:30:52 PM PDT
by
rhema
("Break the conventions, keep the commandments." -- G. K. Chesterton)
To: rhema
3
posted on
09/07/2006 3:32:19 PM PDT
by
somniferum
(Annoy a liberal.. Work hard and be happy.)
To: rhema
Nice to see liberals eat their own for a change.
Even sweeter when it's lawyers.
4
posted on
09/07/2006 3:33:18 PM PDT
by
VOA
To: rhema
Wouldn't it be a hoot if the MAWL (Minnesota Association of White Lawyers) filed suit?
5
posted on
09/07/2006 3:34:00 PM PDT
by
Gay State Conservative
("An empty limousine pulled up and Hillary Clinton got out")
To: Gay State Conservative
Wouldn't it be a hoot if the MAWL (Minnesota Association of White Lawyers) filed suit? What makes me think a Google search for the MAWL is bound to be fruitless?
6
posted on
09/07/2006 3:43:06 PM PDT
by
rhema
("Break the conventions, keep the commandments." -- G. K. Chesterton)
To: rhema
What makes me think a Google search for the MAWL is bound to be fruitless?Oh, I don't know, among all those lawyers there must be at least one fruit!
;^)
7
posted on
09/07/2006 3:55:48 PM PDT
by
JimRed
("Hey, hey, Teddy K., how many girls did you drown today?" (Hello, I'm a TAGLINE virus. Please help m)
To: rhema
Remember, this is from the most liberal blue city in a blue state of liberal caring, sensitivity, understanding and tolerance.
Can't leave out the best part:
Got that, Maslon? Your presence in a group that promotes diversity is intolerable to those with supposedly enlightened views on race.
Some would say, however, that the Association of Black Lawyers practices its own version of discrimination.
This was on display at a July event the association cohosted with Diversity in Practice and five minority lawyers groups. The gathering was billed as a shrimp boil: "a celebration and summer social for attorneys of color in our legal community."This event is for minority attorneys, minority summer associates and minority law students," the invitation read. "No other guests, please. Thanks in advance for helping us focus this event on networking with our peers."
Translation: No whites allowed.
What a topsy-turvy world. The invitation clearly suggests that white lawyers -- even those associated with Diversity in Practice, its cohost and sponsor -- would be unwelcome because of their race.
What's more, the shrimp boil took place on public property, at the Minneapolis Community and Technical College. An intentionally racially segregated event at a tax-funded institution?
8
posted on
09/07/2006 6:43:04 PM PDT
by
RJL
To: rhema
I can only imagine what they think of Clarence Thomas.
9
posted on
09/07/2006 6:45:55 PM PDT
by
tacticalogic
("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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