Allan Bakke, a white male applicant in his mid-30s, applied for admission to the University of California, Davis School of Medicine in 1973 and 1974. UC Davis operated a special admissions program that reserved 16 of 100 seats in each entering class for applicants from certain historically underrepresented minority groups. Those applicants were evaluated by a separate committee using different standards; white applicants were ineligible for those 16 seats. Although Bakke's undergraduate GPA and MCAT scores exceeded those of many applicants admitted through the special program, he was rejected both years. Bakke sued in California state court, alleging the special admissions program violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (because the medical school received federal funds). The trial court found the program unlawful and ordered relief; the California Supreme Court ultimately held the quota unconstitutional, ordered Bakke's admission, and enjoined the university from considering race at all. The Regents sought review in the U.S. Supreme Court.
Does a state medical school's admissions program that reserves a fixed number of seats for minority applicants violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and may race be considered at all as a factor in admissions?
All racial classifications imposed by government are subject to strict scrutiny. Under the Equal Protection Clause (and coextensively, under Title VI for federally funded programs), the government must show a compelling interest and that the means are narrowly tailored. While remedying identified, specific past discrimination by the institution can be compelling, generalized societal discrimination is insufficient. Attaining the educational benefits of a diverse student body can constitute a compelling interest, but rigid quotas or set-asides that insulate applicants from competition based on race are not narrowly tailored. Race may be considered only as a plus factor in individualized, holistic review, without fixed numerical set-asides.
The UC Davis medical school's special admissions program that reserved 16 of 100 seats for minority applicants violated the Equal Protection Clause and Title VI. However, a university may consider race as one factor among many in a holistic admissions process to pursue the educational benefits of diversity. The order requiring Bakke's admission was affirmed, but the blanket prohibition on any consideration of race was reversed.
The Court's decision was highly fragmented. Five Justices (Justice Powell plus Chief Justice Burger and Justices Stevens, Stewart, and Rehnquist) agreed that the UC Davis set-aside violated Title VI and could not stand; a different majority of five (Justice Powell plus Justices Brennan, White, Marshall, and Blackmun) agreed that universities may consider race as one factor to achieve the educational benefits of diversity. Justice Powell's opinion supplied the controlling reasoning under Marks v. United States. Equal Protection and Standard of Review: Powell concluded that all governmental racial classifications—benign or invidious—trigger strict scrutiny. The State's justifications included remedying societal discrimination, increasing the number of minority physicians, serving underserved communities, and enhancing educational diversity. Powell rejected generalized societal discrimination as a compelling interest and found the quota system not narrowly tailored, as it excluded Bakke from competing for 16 seats solely on account of race and lacked individualized assessment. By contrast, Powell accepted that the pursuit of the educational benefits of a diverse student body is a compelling interest grounded in the academic freedom of universities to select their student bodies and in the pedagogical value of diversity. Narrow Tailoring and Quotas: The specific UC Davis program failed narrow tailoring because it used a rigid set-aside that insulated certain seats from competition based on race, rather than evaluating all applicants together under consistent standards. Powell pointed to the so-called "Harvard Plan" as an example of a lawful approach: race may be deemed a plus in an individualized, holistic assessment without fixed numerical quotas or separate tracks. Title VI: The university received federal funds, so Title VI applied. Powell reasoned that Title VI prohibits racial discrimination to the same extent as the Equal Protection Clause when the recipient is a state actor; thus the analysis converged. The four Justices led by Justice Stevens would have resolved the case on Title VI's text alone, concluding that the set-aside excluded Bakke from competition on the basis of race and therefore violated the statute without reaching constitutional questions. Disposition: Combining votes across opinions, the Court affirmed the order to admit Bakke and invalidated the quota system, but also made clear that universities are not categorically barred from considering race as one factor in admissions to achieve the educational benefits of diversity.
Bakke established the core framework for assessing race-conscious university admissions: strict scrutiny applies; diversity can be a compelling interest; quotas are impermissible; and race may function as a plus factor in individualized review. Justice Powell's opinion became the authoritative middle ground and shaped subsequent cases. The decision's influence is evident in Grutter (upholding a holistic law school plan), Gratz (invalidating a mechanical point system), and Fisher (requiring rigorous narrow tailoring and periodic reassessment). In Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard and UNC (2023), the Court substantially curtailed race-conscious admissions, holding that the programs before it failed strict scrutiny and violated the Equal Protection Clause and Title VI. Even so, Bakke remains foundational for understanding the concepts of compelling interest, narrow tailoring, the rejection of quotas, and the role of diversity in higher education.
Bakke is a study in constitutional compromise and statutory convergence. The case rejected rigid, exclusionary quotas but recognized the educational value of diversity, permitting universities to consider race as part of a careful, individualized review. Its strict scrutiny framework and nuanced acceptance of diversity shaped affirmative action doctrine for decades.