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Benefits of Diversity
Our Definition of Diversity
Diversity is an inclusive community of people with varied human characteristics, ideas, and world-views and whose interactions both benefit and challenge each other to grow while making the community better.
Such a community will:
- enhance access, attract and retain a diverse population and promote
equity and equal opportunity.
- encourage interaction among diverse people to enrich the educational
experience, promote personal growth and enhance the community .
- foster mutual respect, value differences and promote cross cultural
understanding
- prepare leaders to live and work in a competitive global community.
By definition, NC State reflects diversity because it comprises a community of individuals from varied backgrounds and demographic categories; it encourages, accepts, and values a diversity of people and ideas; it seeks to promote an environment where equity, respect and understanding represent the norm in the campus climate and; it seeks to prepare entrepreneurs who are effective citizens of a global community. We will know that we have achieved authentic diversity when all four of these objectives are fully realized.
Benefits of Diversity
In an opinion by Justice Sandra O'Connor (joined by Justices Stevens,
Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer), the US Supreme Court explicitly
adopted Justice Powell's view from Regents of the University
of California v. Bakke (1978), finding that "student body diversity
is a compelling state interest that can justify the use of race
in university admissions."
The Court found that the educational benefits of diversity "are
not theoretical but real," and had been substantiated by the University
of Michigan and its amice in supporting briefs. Those benefits
included "cross-racial understanding" and the breaking down of
racial stereotypes. The Supreme Court cited social science research
showing that "student body diversity promotes learning outcomes,..better
prepares students for an increasingly diverse workforce and society,
and better prepares them as professionals." It acknowledged that "major
American businesses have made clear that the skills needed in today's
increasingly global marketplace can only be developed through exposure
to widely diverse people, cultures, ideas, and viewpoints," and
that high -ranking former military leaders have asserted that "a
highly qualified, racially divers officer corps," is essential
to national security. The Court concluded that "[e] effective
participation by members of all racial and ethnic groups in the
civic life of our Nation is essential if the dream of one Nation,
indivisible, is to be realized." Jonathan R. Alger, University
of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Benefits
to Students
Benefits
to Society and the Economy
Diversity
Return on Investment
The
Case for Affirmative Action
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