Excerpted from: john a. powell, Post-racialism or Targeted Universalism?, 86 Denver University
Law Review 1 (2009) (footnotes omitted).
The United States made history on November 4, 2008 by electing Barack Obama as the first
African-American President of the United States. This remarkable event has generated a sense of
pride and a collective celebration that is shared worldwide. The installation of a Black President,
whose election was supported by a significant minority of white American voters, is an occasion
imbued with meaning. The political, social, historical, and cultural significance of the election
has been expressed in many ways and interpreted differently in different quarters. Over the next
several months, if not years, Americans will be trying to determine its contours, synthesizing its
various strands. As we engage this consequential process, different segments of society will
undoubtedly continue to express and promote different meanings, each of which will have
important ramifications. Questions will emerge, such as how are we to understand racial
conditions in society, and what is the proper role of public policy and law for addressing or
avoiding racial questions? These questions about where we are as a society on the issue of race
are not just factual or descriptive, but are deeply political, having implications for how and when
we respond to existing racial conditions and the scope of our collective obligations.
In exploring this set of questions, I employ a different terminology than what is normally used to
discuss this issue. Instead of using the standard nomenclature of race and racism, I will use the
term "racialization." I do so because the language of race and racism is understood in a way that
is too limited and specific to help us acquire greater insight into the important questions posed at
the outset. By racialization, I refer to the set of practices, cultural norms, and institutional
arrangements that are both reflective of and simultaneously help to create and maintain
racialized outcomes in society. Because racialization is a historical and cultural set of processes,
it does not have one meaning. Instead, it is a set of conditions and norms that are constantly
evolving and interacting with the socio-political environment, varying from location to location,
as well as throughout different periods in history. These processes are not just uniformly present
or static. They respond to what we collectively do and think and are therefore highly contested.
However, this is not typically how we as a society think about race and racism. Rather, we see
them as well defined and a limited set of discrete practices that remain constant over time, in
spite of social changes.
Even as we use the term 'racialization' to connote the fluid nature of the phenomenon we are
describing and the broader context in which racial outcomes manifest and are understood, the
use of this term will not automatically break us from our reflexive thinking and mental habits
around race and racism. In this country, the cultural understanding of racism is most closely
associated with Jim Crow, and in the individual context it is imagined as the conduct of racist
individuals consciously engaging in discriminatory activity directed at a particular victim. This
is the point at which most Americans became self-conscious of 'racism' as a problem. Issues of
race and racism came to be understood as an explicit set of laws and policies by institutional
actors such as school boards or municipal governments, or explicit action on the parts of
individuals.5 This overly individualistic approach to race, racism, and racialization fits well with
our overall individualistic approach to many life issues. Consequently, issues of race are likely to
be seen primarily as deliberate psychosocial events, instigated by institutions managed or
directed by bad actors, or individual actors themselves. Even though the Jim Crow system was a
highly institutionalized and extensive formal regime of racial oppression, a system that was only
partly legal, in the popular imagination much of this system is reduced to the individual bigotry
of bad state actors, whose policies can be simply purged or reversed in an election cycle or by
excising the offending de jure rules. According to this individualistic point frame of analysis, if
one does not engage in conscious acts of racism, or better still does not see race as a reality, then
there can be no racism or racialization.
At the same time, we have more consciously embraced a public position of racial
equalitarianism. Virtually all sectors of society eschew racism. To call someone racist does not
just impugn the legality of his or her actions, but also the morality of the person. To call
someone racist today is seen as incendiary and a form of character assassination. The good
American not only refuses to engage in conscious racially motivated behavior, he also refuses to
see race or call it out. In other words, he is race-blind. This is a principle purportedly embraced
in the dream of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The good American can claim that, to the extent that
others share his blindness, race does not matter.
The conservative mode of race blindness has been at times extremely callous. Consider the
plurality's opinion in Parents Involved. From this perspective, racial hierarchy is legally
irrelevant to the Constitutional principle of Equal Protection unless state-sponsored, conscious
discrimination is directly implicated and is a proximate cause. The conservative uses
colorblindness not just as a bar to engage the issue of race, but also as a justification to preclude
any intervention. It is a narrative that not only supports the racial status quo, but also easily
blames marginal groups for it. Colorblind conservatives purport not to be concerned with racial
conditions, but only with purity of mind with respect to intent. They see the evil to be guarded
against as the noticing of race--the psychological state, not the condition of racial groups and
the distribution of opportunity itself. Justice Thomas is not only indifferent to racial
arrangement, practices or conditions, he believes that there is a real harm suffered when we see
race, whether our intentions are benevolent or malign.
This is not the position of the liberals that supported President Obama. The phrase 'post-racialism' has been adopted to describe their race blindness. Like their conservative cousins,
they also believe that racialization is primarily a psychological event17 and that good Americans
are beyond race. Race does not matter--much. Unlike colorblind conservatives, they are willing,
under some conditions, to be race sensitive. But they also agree that a frontal attack on racial
conditions is divisive.
In the wake of President Obama' s victory, the question of where we are with regards to race has
surfaced again and again. The answer that both the conservative colorblind proponents and the
liberal post-racial proponents assert is that we are all but beyond race. According to this
perspective, a few old-style racists may remain, especially in the South, but they, like many civil
rights activists, are still stuck in the old paradigm from the past. Apparently, neither of these
groups has realized how much conscious racial attitudes have changed, even since Barack
Obama was elected President. The post-racialists see the civil rights activists and the explicit
racists as locked in a struggle that is already antiquated and outmoded. According to this view, it
is not just a distraction, it is a divisive. The alternative to this old, tired battle is post-racialism.
The question of where we are with regard to race then becomes binary. We are either in a
divisive space from the past where we continue to assert the dominance of conscious racism, or
we are in a post-racial world where race really does not matter to most Americans.
To post-racialists, white Americans' support of President Obama is proof positive that we are in,
or rapidly approaching, a new, post-racial era. They argue that young people do not even see
race, and that only those persons over forty are still likely to think in racial terms. All we must
do is wait patiently, and post-racialism will grow as the older generations pass on. They further
assume that there is a direct connection between improved racial conscious attitudes, meaning
race-blindness and ending racial inequality.20 While there is a certain intuitive logic to this
assumption, it turns out that is often clearly wrong.
One way of expressing this racial blindness is to be neutral on issue of race. There are several
problems with this approach. The proponents of this position are apparently most interested in
race blindness or neutrality in the design of policy and programs. Less attention is paid to the
administration or implementation of policies and programs, and more importantly their effects. It
is clear that something that is neutral in design is not necessarily neutral in its effect. Yet, the
courts and the public are all but obsessed with the design, and even more narrowly with the
intent of the design, but not the effects of these policies. If an otherwise neutral program is
overlaid on practices that are themselves racially unfair, it is likely to not only leave such
arrangements undisturbed, but perpetuate and exacerbate them. Consider the fact that black
veterans returning from World War II received federal monies to attend colleges that were
highly segregated and uneven in quality. Awarding federal college grants to all soldiers on a
racially neutral basis would only exacerbate inequality in educational outcomes as whites receive
a greater advantage for the same tax dollar. Fairness is not advanced by treating those who are
situated differently as if they were the same. For example, it would make little sense to provide
the measured protections against hurricanes for Midwestern communities as coastal communities
or to provide the same degree of health resistance investment for diseases such as malaria where
an outbreak is much less likely. But even the goal of race neutrality in the effect is too narrow to
redress racial disadvantage. Even if the institutions where such resources will be used are
themselves neutral, it may not be enough to aim for neutrality in effect if the beneficiaries of
such efforts are situated differently. Equality of effect can produce very different holistic
outcomes depending on the needs of the beneficiaries.
With those considerations in mind, what are we to do with our existing racialized conditions and
arrangements, from schools, to housing, to the criminal justice system? Will these issues be
automatically addressed by the passing of time? Many conservatives say that the proper
response--the only possible response--is to do nothing. They argue that colorblindness
prohibits us from doing anything that would be either sensitive to race or require the use of
racial classifications. Other conservatives argue that we must convince racially marginalized
groups to adopt the proper cultural values so that they may take advantage of the new race-blind
landscape. The opportunity is there; if Blacks and Latinos fail to take advantage of this new
arrangement, it is their own fault. For the conservatives, it would be a moral and legal mistake to
have the state intervene. The post-racialists are more likely to support state intervention, but they
are reluctant to do much unless it can be framed in a universal manner where an explicit
consideration of race is largely off the table. This has the apparent advantage of helping those
who have been historically excluded while avoiding being race-specific, which is seen as
divisive.
There are a number of problems with this approach, which I will call false universalism. One
concern is conceptual, another is empirical, and still a third is problematic from a legal or policy
perspective. Given the constraint of space, I will focus primarily on the first two problems.
Universal programs begin with a conception of what is universal based on background
assumptions that are non-universal. Virtually all universal approaches are de facto targeted or
particular. The Social Security Act, often described as the quintessential universal policy, was
universal, only insofar as the universal was a white, male, able-bodied worker. In its early
years, the elderly were excluded since they did not have a history of paying contributions into
the system. Under the cultural norms of the era, men were the primary wage earners, and
women typically worked in the home. As a consequence of discriminatory patterns, they were
often kept out of most areas of the labor force. Unpaid household labor and child rearing
responsibilities are not counted toward Social Security earnings. Even today, women who take
time off to raise children or select careers with more flexible working hours will earn less, on
average, then their male counterparts, and will therefore have lower social security benefits upon
retirement. And because of exclusions of agricultural and domestic workers, exclusions built-in
to appease Southern resistance to the Act, 65% of African-Americans were denied its
protections.
The following question helps to expose the conceptual problem: Why is it divisive to focus on
race-specific programs or talk about race? The stock explanation is that race does not matter.
But even if race does not matter why is such an approach seen as divisive? The very intensity of
racial feelings in our society belies the assertion that race does not matter. The energy and need
for race not to matter to whites in and of itself suggests that race does indeed matter. There is an
assumption that racially targeted programs create white resentment because there is a sense that
whites that are playing by the rules are having things taken from them and given to undeserving
non-whites who do not play by the same rules. This resentment is, apparently, not of the Jim
Crow form. These whites are willing to accept any non-white that plays by the rules. What they
object to is helping what they perceive as rule-breakers. This has more promise for racial
fairness, but also turns out to be wanting.
Consider something issues such as fair housing, school integration, or reform of the criminal
justice system. Why should these efforts be controversial and divisive? George Lipsitz suggests
that what is being challenged is not a material zero-sum policy, but instead what he callsn the
"possessive investment in whiteness." The need to keep the racial 'other' out of schools and
neighborhoods and controlled by the criminal justice apparatus can only make sense if race does
matter. What the overused resentment argument conceals is how concern for white resentment is
employed to protect white prerogative and privilege. But why would whites vote for Obama and
still insist that schools, neighborhoods, and other opportunities continue to be racialized? Are
they racist or not? I will return to this question below.
There is also an empirical problem with the false universal approach as well. The empirical issue
is not one of design or administration but outcome. What is it that we are trying to achieve in our
universal efforts? There is no single answer to this question. Some are trying to achieve racial
blindness; others are trying to achieve racial justice or fairness. While the two goals could work
in tandem, in practice they are often in conflict. Dona and Charles Hamilton look at many efforts
to use universal programs. They conclude that to the extent we are concerned with racial justice,
for a number of reasons, virtually all of them fail to promote this outcome.39 Ira Katznelson
looked at some of the most popular universal programs coming out of the New Deal and World
War II and concluded that these programs by and large benefited whites disproportionately.
While the programs may have still benefited non-whites, they often exacerbated the disparities
between whites and non-whites. In many instances, universalism will not work to address the
needs of marginalized racial and ethnic groups.
In fact, it is possible, even likely, that universal programs will exacerbate existing inequalities.
Some universal programs were designed to benefit whites more than non-whites, but let us
consider programs where this was not the clear design. Defined as one of this country's greatest
accomplishments, the Interstate Highway Act of 1956 used federal dollars to subsidize the
creation of the suburbs. This was the largest public works project in American history at the
time. It gave impetus to waves of migrating middle- and upper-class families to abandon the
central cities for the suburbs. At the same time, many downtown regions were surrounded or
demolished by massive highway construction, and the revenue generated by these projects did
not return to the communities that were losing their churches, schools, and homes. As one author
put it, "[h]ighways made suburban housing available on one end while destroying urban housing
on the other." The ensuing arrangement of racially isolated urban dwellers and equally racially
isolated suburban residents, hastened by the white flight that followed Brown v. Board of
Education's integration mandate the same year, is a pattern we live with today. Simply put,
ostensibly universal programs have no less potential to exacerbate inequality than to ameliorate
it. Treating people who are situated differently as if they were the same can result in much
greater inequities.
Consider also the Veterans Administration (VA) programs. These programs helped millions of
Americans attend college, acquire homes and start businesses. Veterans Administration
mortgages paid for five million new homes. It was under the GI Bill that interest rates and
thirty-year loans that Americans, for the first time, became more likely to purchase a home than
rent. From 1945 to 1954, the United States added 13 million new homes. Equally impressive
were the educational benefits of VA programming. By 1950, the federal government spent more
on schooling for veterans than on expenditures for the Marshall Plan. For the first time,
millions of Americans acquired a college degree. These programs were race- and gender-neutral
in their design. Yet, in practice, they increased disparity between Blacks and whites and between
white men and white women. In fact, there was no single greater instrument for widening the
racial gap in postwar America. The Bill provided for local and state administration with
Congressional oversight, which was controlled by Southern congressmen. As a result, Blacks
were excluded, rejected, and discouraged from partaking in the benefits of a generous federal
program.
This disparity was challenged by women in an important Supreme Court case, Personnel
Administrator of Massachusetts v. Feeney. In that case, women were able to show that 98% of
the benefit for some portions of this policy went to men. The Court found there was no
discrimination because there was no proof of an women were not likely to be veterans, was
coincidental and not legally or morally significant. And while the disparities were not as stark,
there were also a disproportionate number of white men that benefited from this program. This
universal program that helped create the middle class was insensitive to the conditions of women
and non-white men. This is what Ira Katznelson calls an affirmative action program for white
men. There are several reasons why the program worked out this way. One was that white men
were disproportionately represented in the military. The reason for this was the racialization and
sorting of benefits in other parts of our society. Among other things, there was an explicit
discriminatory barrier for non-whites trying to join the military. But there were also impediments
from other non-military institutions that impacted their ability to join the service. For example,
the service had reading and writing requirements for enlistment. Given the state of black
education, this disproportionately limited the number of Blacks who could join the military.
Even the black men that did join the military did not receive benefits on parity with their white
counterparts. As Amartya Sen notes, they were not able to utilize this benefit to the same extent
as whites. This was partly because in the area of education, Blacks could only use the
educational benefits from the VA in a limited number of poorly equipped historical black
colleges. One of the major assumptions today is that if universal programs focus on an area
where a marginalized group is overrepresented, such as poverty, then the benefit will
disproportionately benefit the marginal group. This would allow race-blind universal policies to
do race-sensitive work. This approach is not only favored by policy makers but also by the
Supreme Court, which has limited the remedial efforts to those where the harms are most visible.
While the idea is intuitively appealing, in fact it is often wrong. A number of efforts to use
income as a soft proxy for race simply do not deliver. On closer examination the reason is clear.
As Gunnar Myrdal noted in 1944, poor Blacks and poor whites are not similarly situated. Blacks
suffer from cumulative causation or mutual reinforcing restraint. Let us assume for simplicity
that there are ten constraints reducing opportunity for group A, and two of those constraints are
reducing opportunity for group B. Suppose that the presence of any of the constraints is
sufficient to deny opportunity. Let us also assume that group A is over-represented on
constraints 1 and 2, which are also the constraints holding back group B. A universal policy that
removed constraints 1 and 2 would vastly increase the opportunity movement of group B. It
would not, however, change the conditions of group A because there are still eight remaining
constraints reducing opportunity for that group. Yet the failure of group A to translate the policy
into opportunity might be seen as a failure on the part of group A, and not a failure of policy.
What this false universalism fails to address is that groups of people are differently situated in
relation to institutional and policy dynamics. If one only looks at one or two constraints, one is
likely to inaccurately assume that groups who are in very different circumstances are in fact
similar. The flaw in this false universalism is not overcome by anti-discrimination policies. One
could argue that the disfavored group is not being discriminated against in a traditional sense.
Instead, their situatedness is the cause of the disadvantage.
Race was a central issue in the Mt. Laurel suit brought to address the needs of low-income home
seekers. For the sake of comity, the case was reframed as a case about class instead of race. It
was assumed that because Blacks and Latinos were in greater need of affordable housing, policy
makers could address the issue of race in a less divisive universal frame of class or
socioeconomic status. The program proved successful in producing affordable housing. But it
also increased the racial isolation of Blacks and further segregated them from opportunity. Like
the VA program and the New Deal, it increased the material and social distance between poor
whites and poor non-whites. The housing program failed to understand the importance of the
situatedness of different groups in relation to institutional interactions and processes. To fully
understand the importance of this situatedness, one must look at what the interaction of
institutions does in creating and distributing opportunity benefits and burdens. The political
philosopher Iris Young observed that the more complex society becomes, the more our
relationships and opportunities will be mediated through institutional arrangements. This is not
just true in relationship to non-whites but for all groups in society.
As we consider the importance of this insight, at a rudimentary level, it is not particularly
profound. Most of our modes of commerce, from the purchase of groceries to banking, have
been depersonalized. Instead of buying produce from the farmer or taking a loan from the local
banker, we mediate these exchanges through ATM machines and supermarkets. At a deeper
level, we know that the neighborhood we live in may be more important than the house we live
in.61 We know that where we live will impact the schools our children go to, our safety, and our
access to not just jobs, but also to people and both material and social wealth. A middle-income
person living in a poor neighborhood is not similarly situated to a middle-income person living
in a middle-income neighborhood. The importance of institutional arrangements and the
interactions within these structures for the distribution of opportunity in our society is only
increasing.
Universal programs often operate on the unstated assumption that the particular conditions of the
more favored group are universal. Thus, the Social Security Act, a quintessentially universal
program, began with a conception of a recipient that was a working, white male. The
development of a policy or program with an ostensibly universal norm that favors or disfavors a
particular group is likely to be an unconscious and unintentional process, but no less harmful.
When Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans, there was a great deal of confusion. Were we not
already in a largely colorblind society, where if race mattered at all, it mattered only very little?
Why then were so many Blacks stranded? I received several calls from media outlets asking me
if I thought President Bush was racist. It is not that we do not know that there is still persistent
racial inequality in our society, but we have a story line that allows us to justify and explain this
fact when it rudely intrudes into our otherwise public stance that race does not matter. We tell
each other stories about the culture of poverty and the lack of personal and collective
responsibility in racially marginal communities. We talk about segregation from opportunity in
terms of choice, of people just wanting to live with their own. We become armchair sociologists,
uninterested and unconcerned with the facts and even less aware of institutional arrangements
and the work they do. What made Hurricane Katrina particularly difficult is that these stories of
institutional racialization were less available. We never asked why Blacks in New Orleans are
so segregated and so poor. We never asked how they came to be in harm's way. We never asked
why the disinvestment in their communities and lives had been extended to those shameful
levels. We never asked ourselves why a universal evacuation plan required cars when many
Blacks were carless. We assumed. And if there was some unjustified racial play at work, we
looked for the conscious racist.
The final problem for the post-racial position is what I would call a legal and policy limitation.
Once a race-blind position is adopted, it becomes difficult to justify race-sensitive or race-specific polices or laws. The colorblind proponents who oppose considering race at all are on
firmer ground. If race is irrelevant, what is the justification legally or otherwise for using it? The
conservative position, while concerned about the socially explosive consequence of using race,
is not concerned about racial conditions. But the very assertion that the use of race is explosive
belies their claim that race does not matter. The conservative position would not only reject the
use of race, it would also be very skeptical of race-sensitive policies. Consider the issue of
voluntary integration measures implemented by democratically elected school boards struggling
to overcome legacies of residential separation. The plurality makes the colorblind case in Parents
Involved, arguing that no matter how well intentioned, the Constitution absolutely forbids the
use of racial classifications. Furthermore, according to the plurality, this is the clear meaning of
Brown. According to them, Brown was not about racial conditions or subordination, but
classification. Fortunately, this position is not the law at this point because Justice Kennedy, the
tie-breaking vote, rejected that claim that the Constitution is colorblind. But the post-racial
proponents have not stated a justification of when and why race should be considered in this
post-racial world.
Consider also how post-racial advocates might argue for maintaining Section 5 of the Voting
Rights Act of 1965 (VRA), which the Supreme Court has agreed to review. Overall the VRA
prohibits voting practices or procedures that discriminate on the basis of race, color, or
membership in one of the language minority groups. Section 5 requires that certain state and
local governments, mostly in the South, obtain permission, or "preclearance," from the Justice
Department or a federal court before making changes that affect voting. A Texas municipal
utility district has challenged the application of this section to itself, arguing that Congress did
not take sufficient account of more than four decades of progress toward racial equality, proven
by the recent election of the nation's first black president. Does this historic moment mean that
the central justification for the VRA has now dissipated? It might be easier to adopt a
conservative approach and question the VRA in its entirety than attempt to show that this is one
of the instances in which race still matters. Perhaps the issue will be decided by Chief Justice
Roberts, who opposed efforts to expand the voting rights law in 1982 as a young lawyer in the
Reagan administration, and who currently and clearly challenges governmental use of racial
classifications.
Even if post-racial liberals can make an argument for maintaining the VRA, or addressing racial
isolation in schools or neighborhoods, such an exercise is likely to be seen as inconsistent with
the more fundamental position that race does not matter. Of course we could take a more
nuanced position that race matters under some circumstance and not others. And of course this is
right, but it flies in the face of our attraction to simplistic answers and our eagerness to be done
with race, a position that is markedly less concerned with extant racial conditions.
Today the country faces a housing and credit crisis that disproportionately impacts Blacks and
Latinos.72 But they remain largely invisible except for the occasional blaming of those
communities for taking out loans they could not afford. We know that these communities that
have been under-capitalized since World War II, when affirmative action was white.73 With
little residential or commercial lending from mainstream banking institutions for decades,
isolated communities of color were prey for high-cost credit institutions that face little
competition.
Things have indeed changed since World War II. We could not have had a Black President a
decade ago, let alone in the 1940s. Conscious racial attitudes have greatly improved. But it
would be wise for us to remember the euphoria after the Brown v. Board of Education decision,
when many American thought racialization and racism would be dead within ten years.
Today many pundits are asserting that racialization is or soon will be a thing of the past. Thomas
Friedman has stated that the civil war is finally over and the North has won. Others are asserting
that the country is now going through a major realignment that will put an end to the Southern
Strategy of appealing to white resentment. But the writers making these assertions have failed to
take into account that only a few years ago most Americans had not even heard of the Southern
Strategy, and that conservatives have been claiming for decades that we are beyond race.
The process of racialization has changed and is changing. We continue to have some old-style
explicit racists, but their numbers are declining. Even though we talk about white and non-white
attitudes, there are a range of attitudes and conditions reflected in each racialized group. What
may be more interesting is that most of us carry conflicting racial attitudes within ourselves. As
President Obama accurately described, "None of us--black, white, Latino, or Asian--is immune
to the stereotypes that our culture continues to feed us, especially stereotypes about [Blacks]."
But it is a serious mistake to define racialization narrowly, only to then dismiss it. There are
more possibilities than the Jim Crow racial practices of the 1950s and 60s, the colorblind
position, or post- racialism. We are in a space where our old way of thinking about race does not
serve us well and can easily lead us to misunderstand the opportunities and challenges that are
before us.
There are two emerging sites for the practice of racialization today and they are related. The first
site is in the processes and practices of inter-institutional arrangement that continue to distribute
racialized outcomes in part because of our different situatedness. The second site is ambivalence
that unconsciously impacts our racial meaning and prac tices. The first is called structural
racialization and the second is called implicit bias. To start with the latter first, implicit bias
research suggests that most of us have implicit biases that can impact our behavior and
understanding. Though most of us are completely unaware of their influence on our
subconscious, these biases affect how we perceive, interpret, and understand others' actions.
Because these attitudes-- unrecognized on the conscious level but powerful at the subconscious
level--influence choices and decisions, individual and institutional discrimination can occur
even in the absence of blatant prejudice, ill will, or animus. This bias has been measured and
documented in the Harvard Implicit Association Tests. This does not mean that we are all
secretly racist. It does suggest, however, that we are complex and conflicted and that this conflict
can be organized to make either our biases more salient or our equalitarian aspiration more
salient. The Southern Strategy was designed to mobilize racial resentment and worked well from
1968 until the election of President Obama. We can challenge the nefarious effort to make our
biases more salient, but we cannot do so by being race blind. As President Obama reminds us:
If an internalization of antidiscrimination norms over the past three decades--not to mention
basic decency--prevents most whites from consciously acting on [negative racial] stereotypes in
their daily interactions with persons of other races, it's unrealistic to believe that these
stereotypes don't have some cumulative impact on the often snap decisions of who's hired and
who's promoted, on who's arrested and who's prosecuted, on how you feel about the customer
who just walked into your store or about the demographics of your children's school.84
To address structural racialization, we must understand the work that our institutions and
policies are in fact doing, not what we want or hope for them to do. In order to understand this,
we must take seriously our group situatedness. I have already argued that a universal approach is
likely to be ineffective. Others argue that targeted racial efforts are likely to fail in part because
of the continuing racial resentment that targeted efforts create and preserve. For a sincere policy
maker this suggests a difficult choice. Either avoid race and leave much of the existing racial
practices and arrangements undisturbed, or deal with race and excite racial resentment that will
undermine the policies and the electability of the politician. But there are powerful and effective
alternatives to these two choices.
One alternative is to learn a great deal about how to talk about race in ways that are not divisive.
The second alternative is to make sure our institutions do the work we want them to do. This is
done by adopting strategies that are both targeted and universal. A targeted universal strategy is
one that is inclusive of the needs of both the dominant and the marginal groups, but pays
particular attention to the situation of the marginal group. For example, if the goal were to open
up housing opportunity for low-income whites and non-whites, one would look at the different
constraints for each group. Targeted universalism rejects a blanket universal which is likely to be
indifferent to the reality that different groups are situated differently relative to the institutions
and resources of society. It also rejects the claim of formal equality that would treat all people
the same as a way of denying difference. Any proposal would be evaluated by the outcome, not
just the intent. While the effort would be universal for the poor, it would be especially sensitive
to the most marginal groups.
Because institutions interact and impact the effects of each other, it will also be necessary to be
mindful of the interaction of institutions. This is an approach that we have adopted at the Kirwan
Institute under the rubric of opportunity communities or opportunity structures. This was also
one of the key issues in Parents Involved where a majority of the Court acknowledged the
interactions of institutions, and softened its requirement of conscious racial infraction to support
race-sensitive policy intervention.
At the same time, targeted universalism sees marginalized populations in American society as
the canary in the coal mine, to borrow a metaphor developed by Lani Guinier and Gerald
Torres.86 It recognizes that problems faced by particular segments of American society are
problems that could spill over into the lives of everyone, just as the lower Ninth Ward was not
the only part of New Orleans to suffer in the wake of Katrina. Likewise, the subprime credit
crisis did not end in poor, urban communities, but has spread far beyond and has been felt
throughout the global economy. In a time of economic crisis, the dangers are never greater that
a commitment to racial fairness will be jettisoned to expedience or ostensibly universal concerns.
This is a mistake. As the President has written, "[N]owhere is it ordained that history moves in a
straight line, and during difficult economic times it is possible that the imperatives of racial
equality get shunted aside."87 As the experience of the New Deal initiatives illustrate, even
universal policies, if not well designed, can exacerbate rather than ameliorate racial conditions.
Many of the current proposals for spending the infrastructure funds look to divert much of the
funding to existing road proposals across states. This broad and regressive use of the
infrastructure stimulus funds may produce jobs in the short term, but it is just a replication of
existing models of public investment which have produced inequitable and unsustainable
growth. What are truly needed are strategic investments which produce economic development
at a broad scale while strategically transforming communities and cities.
The manifold crisis we now face as produced a rare opportunity to transform our present
institutional and regulatory arrangements. The policies we promulgate will set the course of
development for generations to come just as the post New Deal and post WW-II arrangements
laid the groundwork for generations that followed them. This window of opportunity will remain
open only for so long. In this moment, we can work towards building a more equitable future, or
repeat the mistakes of the past. If we fail at this, we will be trying to correct our missteps for
years to come.
Targeting within universalism is also the approach supported by President Obama in his book
The Audacity of Hope. He writes: "We should support programs to eliminate existing health
disparities between minorities and whites . . . , but a plan for universal health-care coverage
would do more to eliminate health disparities between whites and minorities than any race-specific programs we might design." Although President Obama expresses support for race-targeted polices designed to "eliminate" certain disparities, he prefers universal policies which
are race-sensitive in pursuit of the same end as "good politics" that is less likely to arouse the
flames of racial resentment.
There will still be an issue of possible racial resentment, even with targeted universal programs.
Racial resentment does not simply represent racist attitudes; it also represents both ambivalence
and confusion. A more sophisticated understanding of implicit bias and how the mind works
will be important in learning how to effectively communicate in a way that makes our sense of
fairness and connectedness salient. The fact that this kind of communication is even possible
suggests that we have made progress. But it should not be overstated. Ambivalence on matters of
race is a deep part of United States history. Thomas Jefferson hated slavery and worried about
what it was doing to the country and the psyche of whites. He had a long-term, intimate
relationship with a slave and yet was one of the major architects of the ideology of racial
inferiority. Lincoln supported the end of slavery but did not believe that the races could ever live
together. Our very concept of freedom is bound up with the concept of slavery and unfreedom.
In analyzing how Obama's ascendancy to the presidency has changed and will change the
process of racialization, we should congratulate ourselves. But we should also be deliberate and
thoughtful about how to make the most of this important opportunity. The popular media and
culture like the idea of post-racialism and colorblindness. Some have suggested that we are
entering into a new era of colorblind racial dominance. Some have suggested that we are moving
from a white and non-white society to a black and non-black society where educated and
professional Blacks will be embraced as non-black, while those who are considered black will be
extremely marginalized.94 The struggle for racial justice and fairness will need to focus on two
related areas--the two emerging sites of racialization that are discussed above.
First, we must develop a more sophisticated understanding of the working of the human mind,
building on the research on neurolinguistics and implicit bias. Second, we must focus on the
institutional arrangements and policy interactions and the work that they do with sensitivity to
our situatedness. Where we are, and where we are going, in terms of racial justice is in flux and
fluid. We are changing both as a matter of demographics, but more importantly as a matter of
our history and practices. Where this journey and process will lead us is not predetermined. As
we develop as a pluralistic nation, we must acknowledge that the racial binary is not a useful
way to think about our journey. The language of race and racism does not adequately express all
that needs to be conveyed in our discussion of race. We need a new way to talk about race and
racialization, and a meaningful way to analyze racialization. A universal approach for inclusion
requires sensitivity to our particular conditions. The approach focuses on outcomes not just
inputs or design. Our communication strategy must be tailored to garner support for policies that
are sensitive to the particular, but broadened to encompass universal concerns.
In the final analysis, we should not allow this important milestone to blind us to the important
work that needs to be done. We are not there, wherever there is. Race matters, but not in the
same way as it did forty years ago. And maybe most important--what we do and what our
institutions do matters. If we do not change our institutions to reflect our expressed attitude, our
attitudes will change to reflect our institutions.
|