Liberate Public Schools
from Government by Lawsuit

  
xi
Introduction Previous Next

Anatomy of

Carlin v. Board of Education

A Thirty-Year California "Desegregation" Class Action,
Superior Court of San Diego County, No. 303800

Kari Carlin, et al., Plaintiffs
v.
Board of Education, San Diego Unified School District,
Defendant;

Groundswell, et al., Intervenors

 

June 27, 1963
 

Jackson v. Pasadena City School Dist. 59 Cal.2d 876,881. Dictum: “(T)hat school boards take steps, insofar as reasonably feasible, to alleviate racial imbalance in schools regardless of its cause.”
 

December 4, 1967

Carlin
 

Plaintiffs, a group of students of diverse races, including “Caucasian,” filed this action against the Defendant Board of Education to “Integrate the San Diego School System.” The White enrollment was then 76 percent.
  

December 7, 1973

Carlin
 

The Court determined the existence of a class action and described the class as “(a)ll students attending the San Diego Unified School District and their parents and legal guardians who believe that said schools should be racially balanced, if necessary through court order.” [emphasis added]    Next

  


To facilitate referencing, online pagination matches the printed book.
Jackson  Jackson v. Pasadena City School Dist., 59 Cal.2d 876 (1963)
Pasadena, California
  
Carlin   Carlin v. Board of Education, San Diego Unified School District,
San Diego Superior Court No. 303800 (1967-1998)
San Diego, California
Enstrom: pro bono counsel, 1979-1998
 
Carlin Board of Education v. Superior Court, 61 Cal.App.4th 411 (Feb.1998)
[conclusion of Carlin v. Board of Education]
San Diego, California
  
          Liberate: Anatomy, pages xi - xvi — Previous Next
  

Liberate Public Schools
from Government by Lawsuit

A Long Pro Bono Struggle
Against Racially Balancing Public School Students
in a Thirty-Year Lawsuit
by Elmer Enstrom, Jr.
  
Contents
A chronological presentation of the 30-year Carlin affirmative action lawsuit:
a legal battle to reassert the "separation of powers" concept
of a republican form of government embodied in our Constitution.
  
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