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Jump Starting Racial Justice
The appointment of Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme
Court has stirred up another round of debate about race in America.
Clearly we have not yet achieved a post-racial society. But we could
take some steps in that direction by acknowledging historic
wrong-doings and making sure future policy making promotes racial
equity.
In his historic Philadelphia speech on race,
then candidate Barack Obama genuinely tried to unify us in facing our
failures. Many people hoped that President Obama would be our racial
savior, single-handedly bringing an end to centuries of struggle
against discrimination. Some were quick to declare that racism, as we
knew it, is over.
Yet familiar patterns and headlines persist: A spike in racial hate crimes and hate groups. More police killings of people of color. Skyrocketing unemployment rates among Blacks and Latinos. Crackdowns on immigrants. An historic loss of wealth for people of color forced into foreclosure. And racist speech all over the Internet.
Although the delusion of "post-racialism" was clearly preposterous, since President Obama took office, we've heard hardly a mention of the structural racism that permeates our economic, political, and cultural institutions.
The good news is that sensible solutions exist. Two especially promising solutions are public reconciliation processes, like the one made famous in South Africa, and proactive racial impact planning and analysis now being employed widely in the United Kingdom.
Truth and Reconciliation-Then and Now South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission provided a forum for constructive and candid conversation about historic racial inequalities. The court-like commission, chaired by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, held hearings around the country to investigate human rights abuses, restore victims' dignity, formulate rehabilitation proposals, and consider individuals' applications for amnesty. The public airing of the ongoing harm caused by abuses of justice and human rights transformed the country. And the commission sparked nationwide discussion of appropriate responses, ranging from amnesty to reparations.
South African emphasized a restorative, rather than retributive system of justice, where individual offenders and society as a whole were obligated to officially acknowledge and take responsibility for the harms done to victims and communities. "Revealing is healing" was not simply a slogan, but a cornerstone for conciliatory power.
Archbishop Tutu wrote in the commission's final report: "There were others who urged that the past should be forgotten-glibly declaring that we should 'let bygones be bygones'. This option was rightly rejected because such amnesia would have resulted in further victimisation of victims by denying their awful experiences... The other reason amnesia simply will not do is that the past refuses to lie down quietly. It has an uncanny habit of returning to haunt one."
Amnesty International, which advocates for effective truth commissions, reported in 2007 that truth commissions had been established in 28 countries and others were being considered, with more than half of them created in the previous ten years. Functions may include investigating past abuses, holding perpetrators accountable, fostering reconciliation, developing a historical record, memorializing past events, recommending reparations, and proposing institutional reforms to prevent future problems.
Surfacing the truth, of course, does not by itself remedy past injustices or change unfair institutions and policies. But it's a necessary first step.
If the U.S were to follow suit by establishing an officially sanctioned process for acknowledging our racialized history, it could help build deep understanding across communities and reveal new transformative possibilities. The scope of a truth commission here would certainly have to be negotiated since the legacy of racial inequality in our country has both longstanding roots and current manifestations.
Even a scope limited to racially inequitable policies and institutional practices that have occurred in our lifetime could offer many lessons for today. For example, a thorough airing of practices ranging from redlining and blockbusting to exclusionary covenants and public contracting would shed light on our enduring racial wealth divide. Such an examination could also help us understand how the prevalence of predatory lending in communities of color has resulted in a multi-billion dollar loss of wealth for people of color who are forced into foreclosure.
Indeed, some individual states and locales have adopted or are promoting variations on the truth commission model. The Oklahoma Legislature created the Tulsa Race Riot Commission to investigate a 1921 incident where a white lynch mob went on a two-day rampage where they killed as many as 300 African Americans, burned homes and churches and destroyed the "Black Wall Street" business district. In its final report issued in 2001, the Commission recommended direct payments to survivors and descendants, a memorial to the dead, and scholarships and economic development funding for the affected community. Later that year, the state legislature passed a Race Riot Reconciliation Act, approving some, but not all of the commission's recommendations.
Other cities have created race riot commissions to examine particular historical events such as Greensboro, North Carolina, and Wilmington, North Carolina. And there's a grassroots effort underway towards establishing a Truth and Reconciliation Commission in the state of Mississippi.
Preventing Future Discrimination While truth commissions have a largely retrospective focus, another model for addressing structural racism from a more prospective standpoint is one that has been adopted in the United Kingdom, known as the "Race Equality Duty." This is a far-reaching government commitment and legal responsibility to eliminate discrimination, promote racial equality and foster good race relations.
Public agencies from federal authorities to local police departments and schools are required to create strategic plans to advance racial equality. And major policy proposals must undergo Race Equality Impact Assessments, a systematic review aimed at anticipating and preventing adverse impacts for any racial group.
Since 2001, when the law was adopted, public entities across the U.K. have developed racial equality plans. At their best, they attract public engagement and vigorous debate, which informs and improves collective decisions. But, like any government task, if political leadership is lacking, the plans can also become bureaucratic paperwork with minimal public input or impact.
The U.K. is refining its process to make it more effective and better aligned with other interests, including human rights, gender equity, and disability rights. The government is now developing a new Equality Bill to clarify and unify its framework, with enforcement to be largely overseen by the Equality and Human Rights Commission.
The U.K. model places government at the forefront of not only eliminating racial discrimination, but of actually promoting equality, opportunity, and inclusion across society. Instead of waiting for discrimination to occur before taking action, government authorities are charged with the duty of preventing potential adverse impacts.
In Northern Ireland, the Department of Transport and Industry introduced a national minimum wage. The Department's racial equality impact assessment found that the minimum wage would benefit 130,000 ethnic minority workers in the U.K. The government conducted public awareness campaigns in multiple languages, resulting in a significant increase in complaints of underpayment. Through proactive research and action, the government was able to address racial disparities in wages and income.
There's no magic bullet for eliminating structural racism, and each country has its unique racial history and dynamics. The United States does not, yet, have this sort of national legislation, but a handful of states, cities, and counties are moving ahead with their own forms of racial impact assessments:
- Last year, Iowa-which ranked worst in the nation in its ratio of incarceration rates between African Americans and whites-enacted the nation's first law requiring policymakers to prepare racial impact statements for proposals affecting sentencing and probation. Iowa Governor Chet Culver, upon signing the bill, said "I am committed to making sure state government at all levels reflects our shared values of fairness and justice."
- Connecticut has since passed a similar law. Illinois, Oregon, and Wisconsin are also considering adopting racial impact statements for criminal justice policies, much like environmental impact statements are used to minimize adverse impacts.
- The city of Seattle directs all its departments to use a Racial Equity Analysis to guide policy development and budget making. This is helping the city make improvements in areas such as hiring and promotions, public contracts, and immigrant and refugee access to city services.
- King County, Washington, uses an Equity Impact Review Tool to assess key policies, programs and funding decisions. This new tool is part of a broader county-wide Equity and Social Justice Initiative, which has resulted in culturally and linguistically appropriate outreach materials for early childhood intervention services for Somali-, Vietnamese-, and Spanish-speaking families.
- A coalition of community groups in St. Paul, Minnesota is proposing a new policy requiring city staff and developers to compile a Racial Equity Impact Report for all development projects that receive a public subsidy of $100,000 or more.
These initiatives recognize that racism is far more than personal prejudice-it's a historically rooted system of bias that continues to manifest itself in our laws and institutions. Conscious consideration of racial equity is one of the best ways to prevent the unconscious replication of systemic racism.
Jump Start Racial Justice Instead of embracing the empty rhetoric of "post-racialism" and "color-blindness" where systemic problems are ignored, we can build a modern racial justice movement. There's no lack of solutions. We just need leadership and action from the grassroots up, and the political will to think bigger and act boldly.
We can't pin all our hopes on President Obama, but there's certainly no need to remain in our racial rut. Instead, we can jump start racial justice. There's a path forward. Let's take it. Together. Today.
- Posted in


22 Comments so far
Show AllI am totally fed up with both sides playing the race card again and again. "Abortion" and affirmative action are useless issues and SCOTUS rarely gets a hearing on the issues. 9 out of 10 cases are on economic justice which this author mentions nothing about. I don't give a damn if the SCOTUS nominee is black, female, Latino, or whatever ! All I give a damn about is interpreting the law without being too ideological about and so far, the only existing SCOTUS justice who makes sense is John Paul Stevens, god bless his soul. Go ahead and put Sotomayor on the bench. Tomorrow, more corporate crooks will come to SCOTUS on the issue of allowing illegal immigrants to take oh say another 300,000 low paid jobs and will try to make the case that "Americans won't do those jobs" and let's say the vote is tied and Sotomayor has to break the tie. I think we know which way she'll side on. More imported slave labor and more native-born Americans pushed out of work ! More economic injustice and I'll be flaming even more. And then you wonder why a lot of us are pushed into working where we wouldn't think of working otherwise !
The article has nothing to do with SCOTUS, or even Sotomayor.
It has nothing to do with affirmative action.
For example, here is a selection, just for you:
"Some were quick to declare that racism, as we knew it, is over.
Yet familiar patterns and headlines persist: A spike in racial hate crimes and hate groups. More police killings of people of color"
And yes, abortion is useless. TO YOU.
Racial justice has been resolved for the most part. While there may be subtle forms of racism out there, racism for the most part is indeed over and right now we need to move on to issues that have major impacts on all of us. I have seen plenty of racisl crimes in my area and I have seen equal amounts of discrimination of white officers against people of color as well as people of color officers against whites, all of which amounts to racism period. This is very noticable in the south especially in states such as VA, FL, GA, and TX.
As far as I'm concerned about abortion, Roe v Wade will not be overturned guarenteed even if they do continue to weaken it here and there.
Come to Pittsburgh and follow some cops around for a while.
Chat with your neighbors over how they that must make sure a black doesn't buy that house on the market on your street.
Watch how the values for perfectly nice suburban homes plummeted in Penn Hills as soon as black families started moving in.
And what about that NY cop who killed his off-duty buddy last week? Experiments show that white cops shoot black suspects with far less hesitation than white suspects in exactly the same situation.
Employers (especially construction trade unions) discriminate - even the laborers union here is 100% white.
Please google "housing discrimination study" or "employment discrimination study". Plenty of it still happening.
The Northeast I can understand and I can't argue with that. However, I will have to dispute the notion that it's mainly whites discriminating the blacks and latinos particularly in the South and even in the southwest as some out there have been reporting in NM, AZ, and CO. It all varies by the region.
The Rez ???
I believe he is referring to the "reservation".
"As far as I'm concerned about abortion, Roe v Wade will not be overturned guarenteed even if they do continue to weaken it here and there."
The weakening it here and there is PRECISELY point. The right is doing whatever they can, incremental steps, step by step.
And the reason Roe v Wade will not be overturned is because the right are being fought on it. If the right got their way, it WOULD be overturned.
This is similar to GLBT rights, another issue some progressives consider a "distraction". The ideal, what the right has wet dreams about, is a return to criminalisation, via incremental steps, via an incremental rollback of GLBT rights. It isn't just marriage. If they get their way on marriage, they will try to limit another right.
This is similar to what gun control advocates want. Their ideal, what they have wet dreams about, is gun laws similar to those of Japan etc. They usually do not explicitly say so, but once you look close at their positions, that is their ideal, which they want to get to via incremental steps.
Truth comissions are effective if they actually examine historical fact at all levels. "Race" policy, especially in the post civil rights era decades has not been as much about race as it has been about taking apart the civil rights era political power base.
Truth be told is that the methods used to accomplish the remaking of American politics are in fact text book internal state sponsored terrorism. I doubt that few truth commissions understand that post segregation policies were not accidental, but deliberate and successful efforts to protect the white right from democracy. So successful in fact that by 2000 Bush was placed in power.
We need to discuss openly how this was accomplished - from 1963 forward. Too many lives have been lost or ruined to keep this truth hidden. But it is not just about race, as race is merely a construct used to divert the ignorant from the truth.
We have been divided and redivided as needed to prevent democracy from actually taking root in America. We can have single payer, and pre drug war incarceration rates if we can trancend a perception of "others" artfully programmed into our minds.
I argue that grass roots "street history" be taken to urban America - and help people understand what has happend to them since the civil rights era ended, and why.
You can have all the commissions you want; pass all the laws you think necessary and nothing much will be accomplished except for the fact that more dollars will be spent on such mish mash. None of these initiatives overcome the reality of intentional self-segregation; the fact that most people with land lines don't answer the phone; people with cell phones don't answer calls from numbers they don't recognize; the fact that most people don't answer the front door to people they don't know, etc. It is what it is; it's always been this way and there's no changing it.
ringo,
Dont know how old you are, but it _hasn't_ always been that way. Until a few years ago, it was considered common couresy to ALWAYS annswer the phone, and always answr a knock on the door.
Before the era of electronic capitalism, people weren't nearly so self-absorbed and paranoid.
You are correct. The problem is (out of control and idiotic) capitalism. Telemarketers are an example. They seem too stupid to realise that most people do not like to be harassed by strangers to buy things when they are home after work, eating dinner, spending time with family, taking a shower.
People do not answer phones because of the scum known as tele marketeers. Do you want to answer the phone from some idiot trying to sell you something when you are eating dinner, or worse, taking a shower?
Do you want to open your front door to someone who is trying to harangue you into his / her religion?
"These initiatives recognize that racism is far more than personal prejudice-it's a historically rooted system of bias that continues to manifest itself in our laws and institutions. Conscious consideration of racial equity is one of the best ways to prevent the unconscious replication of systemic racism. "
Very true. Read had heed, white CD-reading liberals...
Yunzer, you're right. (You mean "Read and heed," right?) See my comment above viewing the entire U.S. governmental system as essentially affirmative action for whites.
disband the police, legalize drugs and prostitution and gambling, release prisoners held on related charges...local citizens need to administer their own neighborhoods...
The article proposes good models for the U.S. The major problem that should be addressed is the myth, expressed here by maxpayne, that racism in the U.S. is a thing of the past. The election of Obama has made the myth harder to eradicate.
The sense of outrage on the part of white conservatives when they're accused of racism is actually a strong expression of racism. Look at the statistics: Who has the least education? Who is proportionately more likely to be jailed, executed? Who has the least stable family structure? Whose life span is the shortest? Who has the least money? By every measure, except perhaps achievement in some sports, minorities come out well behind conservative whites, especially the ones squawking about "reverse discrimination." If racism – past and present – isn't responsible for this, what else could be responsible but inherent inferiority of minority individuals?
Some conservatives appear to think the explanation for the discrepancies isn't racism, but attempts to counteract it, such as affirmative action, welfare, the left wing MSM, etc. If there's a persuasive argument for this theory, which I consider fatuous, I've yet to hear it. The theory itself suffers from a racist attitude in that minorities are depicted as unable to recognize the obvious: that they're being duped by liberals.
Finally, some conservatives (maxpayne again) blame racism by one minority against others. There may be merit to that theory, but it's an admission that racism is the problem nonetheless.
Even when black males have similar educations, similar educational qualifications, they still earn less income.
For example, from the 2005 US survey:
Median income, 25 and older:
Overall: $32,140
college undergrad degree, all males: $43,143
college undergrad degree, white male: $55,175
college undergrad degree, black male: $41,871
master's degree, all males: $67,123
master's degree, white male: $68,126
master's degree, black male: $53,490
Your figures are consistent with my understanding. By the way, conservatives constantly complain that affirmative action, voting rights legislation, organizations like the NAACP, etc., are discriminatory against whites, who don't have programs specifically intended to help them and are wrongly accused of racism when they start organizations to help whites. They forget that the entire U.S. governmental structure was designed and set up to protect the interests of whites (originally, white males). Some progress has been made to change that, but government in general still does basically the same thing and will continue to do so unless programs to address the effects of current and past racism are maintained.
Yes, indeed, racism is alive and well. A new report on Race and the Recession by the Applied Research Center examines how people of color have been hit the worst by the current economic recession. People of color were the biggest targets of predatory lending by financial institutions and ended up losing billions of dollars in wealth due to foreclosures. Subprime loans were sold to many people of color who could have qualified for traditional, fixed rate, prime loans. And many HIGH-income people of color were more likely to get high-cost loans than LOW-income white borrowers.
Similarly, there's still all kinds of racial discrimination in employment. For example, white people with criminal backgrounds are paid more than people of color without criminal backgrounds. And people of color, as a whole, experience higher rates of unemployment, underemployment or low-wage employment in precarious jobs.
Check out the Race and Recession report at www.arc.org