Class Matters
The Fight to Get Beyond Race Preferences, Reduce Inequality, and Build Real Diversity at America’s Colleges
Contributors
Formats and Prices
- On Sale
- Mar 25, 2025
- Page Count
- 384 pages
- Publisher
- PublicAffairs
- ISBN-13
- 9781541704237
Price
$32.00Price
$42.00 CADFormat
Format:
- Hardcover $32.00 $42.00 CAD
- ebook $19.99 $25.99 CAD
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Richard Kahlenberg has been on a lifelong journey to expand social and economic opportunity and provide a much wider group of people the chance to have a place at the table. In this highly personal and deeply researched book, he dramatically and persuasively illustrates that class disadvantage should be the determining factor for how a broader group of people gain admittance to higher education and the opportunity to “swim in the river of power”.
While elite universities claim to be on the side of social justice, the dirty secret of higher education in the United States is that the decades-long focus on racial diversity provides cover for an admissions system that mostly benefits the wealthy and shuts out talented working-class students. How to rectify the resulting skyrocketing economic inequality and class antagonism is a question of profound moral and political importance.
Kahlenberg has long worked with prominent civil rights leaders on housing and school integration, but he made a controversial decision to go over to the “other side” and provide research and testimony that helped lead to the controversial Supreme Court decision of 2023 that ended racial preferences. Ironically, he shows, this decision could actually result in a progressive policy outcome – from one that benefited the upper-middle class to one that helps working-class students, a disproportionate share of whom are Black and Latino.
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“A spirited argument for a liberal politics of class rather than race…Serious, measured and fair-minded.”New York Times
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“A compelling and provocative examination of the places of race, privilege, and money in college admission...Nuanced, sober, and granular.”Washington Monthly
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“Kahlenberg’s vision for elite college warrants attention as universities adjust to the new legal regime.”City Journal
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“A solid case for building diverse student bodies with closer attention to financial need than to ethnic background.”Kirkus
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“A provocative call to reconsider how diversity in higher education can be achieved.”Publishers Weekly
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“Asians aren’t ‘diverse’ enough, poor whites’ ‘underrepresentation’ is irrelevant, admitting Black corporate executives’ children is ‘levelling the playing field.’ In university admissions, the buzzwords are as frayed as their rationales. Class Matters shows where we have gone wrong so far, and how we will get to justice, equality, and even diversity for real.”John McWhorter, professor of linguistics, Columbia University, and weekly New York Times writer
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“How the promise of the civil rights revolution was betrayed for half a century by a system of cosmetic racial preferences that mask growing economic inequality is a tragic and fascinating story. No one is better qualified to tell it than Richard Kahlenberg, who has devoted his career as a thinker and activist to the dream of a color-blind, egalitarian America.”Michael Lind, author of The New Class War
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“Exceptionally strategic in a Supreme Court case that ended racial affirmative action in college and university admissions, Kahlenberg joined a pantheon of legends—Robert Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr., and Bayard Rustin—and found common ground with conservatives to create social and economic class admissions.”John C. Brittain, UDC School of Law, and former chief counsel, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights
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“For several decades, Kahlenberg has been one of America’s most widely respected, original, and consequential thinkers on education, housing, workers’ rights, and affirmative action. Class Matters is his semi-autobiographical magnum opus. This engagingly written book is the definitive insider’s account of how elite colleges’ race-based affirmative action policies camouflaged extreme rates of rich-kid admissions, clashed with public opinion, and crashed in the Supreme Court. Even better, Kahlenberg offers an authoritative, evidence-based roadmap for turning top universities into genuinely diverse communities in which low-income and working-class students of every demographic description are truly well-represented and respected. This magnificent book is not only a must-read; it’s the text of the debate on the past, present, and future of affirmative action in America.”John J. DiIulio Jr., Frederic Fox Leadership Professor, University of Pennsylvania
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“Kahlenberg has been manning the lonely ramparts of class-based affirmative action for decades. The world has finally caught up with him now that race-based affirmative action has been struck down by the Supreme Court. In his indispensable new book, Kahlenberg lucidly surveys the history of the race-based approach and explains how class-based affirmative action can and must take its place. Liberals and conservatives alike should read this book as a guide to what might come next.”Ruy Teixeira, coauthor of The Emerging Democratic Majority and senior fellow, American Enterprise Institute
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“For decades, Kahlenberg has been the country’s leading proponent of ‘class not race’ in debates over college admissions. The latest iteration of his argument, Class Matters, is characteristically forthright, accessible, and informative. Anyone deeply interested in ongoing struggles over the selection of candidates for seats in the nation’s most selective colleges and universities must come to grips with Kahlenberg.”Randall Kennedy, Michael R. Klein Professor, Harvard Law School
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“Class Matters is a must-read for anyone who believes diversity should be more than skin deep. With the Supreme Court’s decision ending race-based admissions programs, Kahlenberg suggests that social and economic class can be barriers to equal opportunity—regardless of race. His book details ways universities can alleviate the barriers to success they cause.”Linda Chavez, chair, Center for Equal Opportunity
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“Kahlenberg has eloquently argued for decades for socioeconomic preferences in college admissions to ensure equity, diversity, a more interesting education for all enrolled, and more informed and inclusive leaders for the country and beyond. Now that the Supreme Court has ruled against race-based preferences, we really must attend to Kahlenberg’s thesis, so powerfully and persuasively argued here. This is essential reading for all who care about our future society and the future of justice.”Anthony Marx, president, New York Public Library and former president, Amherst College
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