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Showing Original Post only (View all)Beyond the Civil Rights Act of 1964: Confronting Structural Racism in the Workplace [View all]
Long, fascinating research article on structural racism and the role the U.S. Supreme Court has played in reinforcing existing institutional and structural racial hierarchies.
Abstract:
Since 1967, sociologists have produced a compelling body of literature on structural racism that explains why severe racial disparities persist throughout American society in all social domains: employment, education, residential patterns, wealth accumulation, and so on. Structural racism perpetuates the effects of past, overt discrimination because it does its work through organizational procedures and social policies that appear to be race neutral. Dealing with structural racism requires us to focus on social structure instead of the intentions of bigoted individuals.
In this Article, we link the disciplines of sociology and constitutional history to demonstrate that the U.S. Supreme Court has refused to recognize the reality of structural racism in the workplace. Instead, the Court has developed legal doctrines that protect this hidden form of racism, assure its continuation, and disable other branches of the federal and state governments from
eradicating it. The Courts willful blindness toward race and employment ignores the reality of structural racism and instead embeds the justices unacknowledged racial policy preferences into constitutional law. Their doctrinal assumptions about intent,
colorblindness, facial neutrality, and white innocence enable them not just to ignore structural racism but to perpetuate and affirm it.
In this Article, we first review the sociological literature on structural racism and construct a template of structural racism by
identifying its six key components: (1) irrelevance of intent, (2) individualism, (3) belief in structural neutrality, (4) colorblindness, (5) white advantage, and (6) invisibility. We then provide examples of structural racism in the social domain of employment. Next we demonstrate how Supreme Court constitutional decisions regarding employment since 1964 map onto this template of structural racism: (1) the Court demands a showing of intent, (2) the Court insists on the notion that racism is inflicted only by individuals upon individuals, (3) the Court persists in its belief in structural neutrality, (4) the Courts anti-classification understanding of equal protection is merely a judicial formulation of colorblindness, (5) the Courts concern for white innocence reaffirms white advantage and white normativity, and (6) the Courts embrace of all five of these components serves to keep structural racism invisible and thereby further maintains it.
We conclude first that the Court has ignored nearly a half century of substantial research in sociology and instead has clung to
outdated assumptions about how racism operates that perpetuate racial inequality. Second, we find that at the same time, the Court does invoke structural social understandingby ignoring intent, being attentive to group actions and effects on groups, and focusing on inadvertent effects of institutional policies and proceduresbut does so only to protect whites interests.
In this Article, we link the disciplines of sociology and constitutional history to demonstrate that the U.S. Supreme Court has refused to recognize the reality of structural racism in the workplace. Instead, the Court has developed legal doctrines that protect this hidden form of racism, assure its continuation, and disable other branches of the federal and state governments from
eradicating it. The Courts willful blindness toward race and employment ignores the reality of structural racism and instead embeds the justices unacknowledged racial policy preferences into constitutional law. Their doctrinal assumptions about intent,
colorblindness, facial neutrality, and white innocence enable them not just to ignore structural racism but to perpetuate and affirm it.
In this Article, we first review the sociological literature on structural racism and construct a template of structural racism by
identifying its six key components: (1) irrelevance of intent, (2) individualism, (3) belief in structural neutrality, (4) colorblindness, (5) white advantage, and (6) invisibility. We then provide examples of structural racism in the social domain of employment. Next we demonstrate how Supreme Court constitutional decisions regarding employment since 1964 map onto this template of structural racism: (1) the Court demands a showing of intent, (2) the Court insists on the notion that racism is inflicted only by individuals upon individuals, (3) the Court persists in its belief in structural neutrality, (4) the Courts anti-classification understanding of equal protection is merely a judicial formulation of colorblindness, (5) the Courts concern for white innocence reaffirms white advantage and white normativity, and (6) the Courts embrace of all five of these components serves to keep structural racism invisible and thereby further maintains it.
We conclude first that the Court has ignored nearly a half century of substantial research in sociology and instead has clung to
outdated assumptions about how racism operates that perpetuate racial inequality. Second, we find that at the same time, the Court does invoke structural social understandingby ignoring intent, being attentive to group actions and effects on groups, and focusing on inadvertent effects of institutional policies and proceduresbut does so only to protect whites interests.
http://digitalcommons.law.lsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6473&context=lalrev
Citation: Wiececk, W. M., & Hamilton, J. L. (2014). Beyond the Civil Rights Act of 1964: Confronting Structural Racism in the Workplace. Louisiana Law Review, 74(4), 5.
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Beyond the Civil Rights Act of 1964: Confronting Structural Racism in the Workplace [View all]
YoungDemCA
Apr 2016
OP
I had been meaning to read this, since I first saw it. I finally did ...
1StrongBlackMan
Apr 2016
#3