نبذة مختصرة : The plaintiffs in San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez (1973) challenged the constitutionality of the school finance system existing in all states except Hawaii. The Supreme Court, by a 5-4 decision, denied the plaintiffs’ claims. Rodriguez did not precipitate immediate change and thus its historical significance was not immediately identifiable. As a result, historians have mostly overlooked the case. The significance of the case, however, lies in the reasons for the Court’s rejection of the plaintiffs’ claims. Where Brown v. Board of Education dealt with the rights of black children, Rodriguez dealt with the rights of poor children. The plaintiffs sought a political weapon with which to fight class discrimination. The reliance upon the property tax for school funding ensured that the expenditure per pupil reflected the wealth of the surrounding neighbourhood. According to the plaintiffs, the school finance system discriminated on the basis of race and class, thereby violating the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. According to the defendants, however, plaintiffs’ claims challenged one of the fundamental features of federalism: the right of the state to choose localism in education. The rejection of the plaintiffs’ claims marked the Supreme Court’s refusal to further extend constitutional guarantees of equality. It determined that economic rights were not protected by the Constitution, thereby defining the outer parameters of constitutional equality. The opposing arguments encapsulated the contrasting political ideologies of the period, and this dissertation places Rodriguez within the broader historical environment in order to illustrate its historical significance. The case emerged from the new definition of equality that had resulted from the activism of the 1960s, yet the issues it raised extended far beyond its original context. Rodriguez held vast ideological implications regarding the congruity between race and class within American society, it raised institutional ...
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