We examine the possible consequences of a change in law school admissions in
the United States from an affirmative action system based on race to one based
on socioeconomic class. Using data from the 1991-1996 Law School Admission
Council Bar Passage Study, students were reassigned attendance by simulation to
law school tiers by transferring the affirmative action advantage for black
students to students from low socioeconomic backgrounds. The hypothetical
academic outcomes for the students were then multiply-imputed to quantify the
uncertainty of the resulting estimates. The analysis predicts dramatic
decreases in the numbers of black students in top law school tiers, suggesting
that class-based affirmative action is insufficient to maintain racial
diversity in prestigious law schools. Furthermore, there appear to be no
statistically significant changes in the graduation and bar passage rates of
students in any demographic group. The results thus provide evidence that,
other than increasing their representation in upper tiers, current affirmative
action policies relative to a socioeconomic-based system neither substantially
help nor harm minority academic outcomes, contradicting the predictions of the
"mismatch" hypothesis, which asserts otherwise.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/15-STS514 in the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org