From the New York Times:
      Lawyers Debate Why Blacks Lag at Major Firms 
 By ADAM LIPTAK
 Thanks to vigorous recruiting and pressure from corporate clients, black    lawyers are well represented now among new associates at the nation’s    most prestigious law firms. But they remain far less likely to stay at    the firms or to make partner than their white counterparts.
 A recent study says grades help explain the gap. To ensure diversity    among new associates, the study found, elite law firms hire minority    lawyers with, on average, much lower grades than white ones. That may,    the study says, set them up to fail.
 The study, which was prepared by Richard H. Sander, a law professor at    the University of California, Los Angeles, and was published in The    North Carolina Law Review in July, has given rise to fierce and growing    criticism in law review articles and in the legal press. In an opinion    article in The National Law Journal this month, for instance, R. Bruce    McClean, the chairman of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, a major law    firm, took issue with the study’s “sweeping conclusions” but not its    “detailed data analysis.”
  
This is all utterly    predictable from even a cursory knowledge of how the IQ bell curve works.
 In the tournament to become a partner in a lucrative law firm, there are    five hurdles, two of which have been corrupted by affirmative action and    three of which are more meritocratic. Admission to law school and hiring    by big firms is driven by quotas (just don't use the word "quotas," as    the Supreme Court, in its majestic wisdom ruled in the Bakke law school    admission case of 1977). In contrast, graduating from law school and    making partner are less influenced by racial preferences, and passing    the state bar exam remains, so far as I know, wholly objective.
 In other words, there are some goodies the white elite is comfortable    handing out using quotas, and others they feel are just too important to mess with.
 Not surprisingly, affirmative action at the admissions and hiring levels    lure in blacks who are less likely to make it over the meritocratic    hurdles.      Sander has shown that 53% of the black students who enter law school    fail to become lawyers, versus 24% of white students. This is a really    stupid way for society to misdirect and abuse its scarce resource of    intelligent young black people. 
 The outcome for black lawyers hired by hotshot law firms who are in over    the heads competing to become partner might be less dire, however,    because affirmative action is also in operation in corporate law    departments. So, if you start off working 70 hours a week at a Manhattan    law firm, but soon realize that you aren't smart enough to make it to    partner, well, that job offer to go work at Coca-Cola's legal department    in Atlanta can start looking pretty good. 
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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