Cases Involving
“Suspect Classification”
(race, ethnicity, creed,
or national origin)
Strict Scrutiny Test
discrimination
is legal
Cases Involving Sex
or Gender Equality
Intermediate
Scrutiny Test
Cases Involving Age,
Economic Status,
or Other Criteria
Rational
Basis Test
- Is unequal treatment
justified by a “compelling
state interest”?- Is the discriminatory policy
“substantially related” to an
“important government objective”?- Is the law rationally related
to furthering a legitimate
government interest?
- Is the law rationally related
- Is the discriminatory policy
- Is unequal treatment
the “least restrictive” option?
2. Is the discrimination
not substantially broader than
it needs to be to protect the important
government interest?
2. Does the policy avoid
“arbitrary, capricious, or
deliberate” discrimination?
discrimination
is illegal
discrimination
is illegal
discrimination
is illegal
no
no
no no no
discrimination
is illegal
discrimination
is illegal
discrimination
is illegal
Very few cases meet
this standard.
Some discrimination based
on gender is permitted, but
this test is harder to pass
than the rational basis test
applied to gender cases in
the past. This is the easiest hurdle
for a law or policy to pass.
The Court asked...
- Is unequal treatment justified
by a “compelling state interest”? - Is unequal treatment the “least
restrictive” option?
The Court asked...
- Is the discriminatory policy
"substantially related" to
an "important government
objective"? - Is the discrimination not
substantially broader than it
needs to be to to protect the
important government interest?
The Court asked...
- Is the law rationally related
to furthering a legitimate
government interest? - Does the policy avoid
"arbitrary, capricious, or
deliberate" discrimination?
Case 1:
The University
of Michigan Law
School’s “holistic”
race-conscious
admissions policy
is designed to
promote diversity.
Case 2:
The University of
Michigan’s more
rigid race-conscious
undergraduate
admissions policy
was designed to
promote diversity.
Case 1:
A California state
law says that men—
but not women—
can be guilty of
statutory rape.
Case 2:
The Virginia Military
Institute maintained
a male-only
admissions policy.
Case 1:
States have a
21-year-old drinking
age that applies
equally to men
and women.
Case 2:
An Oklahoma
law allowed 18- to
20-year-old women—
but not men—to buy
3.2% beer.
In Case 1,
discrimination
is OK. In Michael M.
v. Superior Court
(1981), the Court
found that the
state had a strong
interest in prevent-
ing illegitimate
pregnancy and in
punishing only the
participant who, by
nature, suffers few
of the consequences
of his conduct.
In Case 2,
discrimination
is not OK. In United
States v. Virginia
(1996), the Court
struck down the
Virginia Military
Institute’s policy
as a violation of the
equal protection
clause of the Four-
teenth Amendment.
In Case 1,
discrimination
is OK. In Grutter v.
Bollinger (2003),
the Court ruled that
the state’s interest
in racial diversity in
higher education
was compelling,
and that this specific
admissions policy
was narrowly
tailored. This was
affirmed in Fisher
v. Univ. of Texas
(2016).
In Case 2,
discrimination
is not OK. In Gratz
v. Bollinger (2003),
the Court struck
down Michigan’s
undergraduate
admissions
policy for not being
narrowly tailored.
How it works: in practice
Evaluating Discrimination Cases
How it works: in theory
Civil Rights
Strict
Scrutiny Test
Intermediate
Scrutiny Test
Rational
Basis Test
The Court said...
The Court said...
The Court said...
In Case 1,
discrimination
is OK. Various state
supreme courts
have upheld these
laws on the rational
basis that the laws
may prevent drunk
driving among 18-
to 20-year-olds.
In Case 2,
discrimination
is not OK. In Craig
v. Boren (1976), the
Court struck down
this law, rejecting
the rational basis
that Oklahoma had
claimed and instead
applying intermedi-
ate scrutiny.
- Is it easier for the government to
discriminate against someone based
on age or race? Why?
2. What is the standard used by the
Court if the state wants to make
distinctions between people based on
race? Under what circumstances and in
what scenarios is discrimination based
on race legal?
Critical Thinking
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