Critical race theory (CRT) is an academic field focused on the relationships between social conceptions of race and ethnicity, social and political laws, and mass media. CRT also considers racism to be systemic in various laws and rules, not based only on individuals' prejudices. The word critical in the name is an academic reference to critical theory rather than criticizing or blaming individuals.
CRT is also used in sociology to explain social, political, and legal structures and power distribution as through a "lens" focusing on the concept of race, and experiences of racism. For example, the CRT conceptual framework examines racial bias in laws and legal institutions, such as highly disparate rates of incarceration among racial groups in the United States. A key CRT concept is intersectionality—the way in which different forms of inequality and identity are affected by interconnections of race, class, gender, and disability. Scholars of CRT view race as a social construct with no biological basis. One tenet of CRT is that disparate racial outcomes are the result of complex, changing, and often subtle social and institutional dynamics, rather than explicit and intentional prejudices of individuals. CRT scholars argue that the social and legal construction of race advances the interests of white people at the expense of people of color, and that the liberal notion of U.S. law as "neutral" plays a significant role in maintaining a racially unjust social order, where formally color-blind laws continue to have racially discriminatory outcomes.
CRT began in the United States in the post–civil rights era, as 1960s landmark civil rights laws were being eroded and schools were being re-segregated. With racial inequalities persisting even after civil rights legislation and color-blind laws were enacted, CRT scholars in the 1970s and 1980s began reworking and expanding critical legal studies (CLS) theories on class, economic structure, and the law to examine the role of US law in perpetuating racism. CRT, a framework of analysis grounded in critical theory, originated in the mid-1970s in the writings of several American legal scholars, including Derrick Bell, Alan Freeman, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Richard Delgado, Cheryl Harris, Charles R. Lawrence III, Mari Matsuda, and Patricia J. Williams. CRT draws on the work of thinkers such as Antonio Gramsci, Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass, and W. E. B. Du Bois, as well as the Black Power, Chicano, and radical feminist movements from the 1960s and 1970s.
Academic critics of CRT argue it is based on storytelling instead of evidence and reason, rejects truth and merit, and undervalues liberalism. Since 2020, conservative US lawmakers have sought to ban or restrict the teaching of CRT in primary and secondary schools, as well as relevant training inside federal agencies. Advocates of such bans argue that CRT is false, anti-American, villainizes white people, promotes radical leftism, and indoctrinates children. Advocates of bans on CRT have been accused of misrepresenting its tenets, and of having the goal to broadly silence discussions of racism, equality, social justice, and the history of race.
Definitions
In his introduction to the comprehensive 1995 publication of critical race theory's key writings, Cornel West described CRT as "an intellectual movement that is both particular to our postmodern (and conservative) times and part of a long tradition of human resistance and liberation." Law professor Roy L. Brooks defined critical race theory in 1994 as "a collection of critical stances against the existing legal order from a race-based point of view".
Gloria Ladson-Billings, who—along with co-author William Tate—had introduced CRT to the field of education in 1995, described it in 2015 as an "interdisciplinary approach that seeks to understand and combat race inequity in society." Ladson-Billings wrote in 1998 that CRT "first emerged as a counterlegal scholarship to the positivist and liberal legal discourse of civil rights."
In 2021, Khiara Bridges, a law professor and author of the textbook Critical Race Theory: A Primer, defined critical race theory as an "intellectual movement", a "body of scholarship", and an "analytical toolset for interrogating the relationship between law and racial inequality."
The 2021 Encyclopaedia Britannica described CRT as an "intellectual and social movement and loosely organized framework of legal analysis based on the premise that race is not a natural, biologically grounded feature of physically distinct subgroups of human beings but a socially constructed (culturally invented) category that is used to oppress and exploit people of colour."
Tenets
Scholars of CRT say that race is not "biologically grounded and natural"; rather, it is a socially constructed category used to oppress and exploit people of color; and that racism is not an aberration, but a normalized feature of American society. According to CRT, negative stereotypes assigned to members of minority groups benefit white people and increase racial oppression. Individuals can belong to a number of different identity groups. The concept of intersectionality—one of CRT's main concepts—was introduced by legal scholar Kimberlé Crenshaw.
Derrick Albert Bell Jr. (1930 – 2011), an American lawyer, professor, and civil rights activist, wrote that racial equality is "impossible and illusory" and that racism in the US is permanent. According to Bell, civil-rights legislation will not on its own bring about progress in race relations; alleged improvements or advantages to people of color "tend to serve the interests of dominant white groups", in what Bell called "interest convergence". These changes do not typically affect—and at times even reinforce—racial hierarchies. This is representative of the shift in the 1970s, in Bell's re-assessment of his earlier desegregation work as a civil rights lawyer. He was responding to the Supreme Court's decisions that had resulted in the re-segregation of schools.
The concept of standpoint theory became particularly relevant to CRT when it was expanded to include a black feminist standpoint by Patricia Hill Collins. First introduced by feminist sociologists in the 1980s, standpoint theory holds that people in marginalized groups, who share similar experiences, can bring a collective wisdom and a unique voice to discussions on decreasing oppression. In this view, insights into racism can be uncovered by examining the nature of the US legal system through the perspective of the everyday lived experiences of people of color.
According to Encyclopedia Britannica, tenets of CRT have spread beyond academia, and are used to deepen understanding of socio-economic issues such as "poverty, police brutality, and voting rights violations", that are affected by the ways in which race and racism are "understood and misunderstood" in the United States.
Common themes
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Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic published an annotated bibliography of CRT references in 1993, listing works of legal scholarship that addressed one or more of the following themes: "critique of liberalism"; "storytelling/counterstorytelling and 'naming one's own reality'"; "revisionist interpretations of American civil rights law and progress"; "a greater understanding of the underpinnings of race and racism"; "structural determinism"; "race, sex, class, and their intersections"; "essentialism and anti-essentialism"; "cultural nationalism/separatism"; "legal institutions, critical pedagogy, and minorities in the bar"; and "criticism and self-criticism". When Gloria Ladson-Billings introduced CRT into education in 1995, she cautioned that its application required a "thorough analysis of the legal literature upon which it is based".
Critique of liberalism
First and foremost to CRT legal scholars in 1993 was their "discontent" with the way in which liberalism addressed race issues in the US. They critiqued "liberal jurisprudence", including affirmative action,color-blindness, role modeling, and the merit principle. Specifically, they claimed that the liberal concept of value-neutral law contributed to maintenance of the US's racially unjust social order.
An example questioning foundational liberal conceptions of Enlightenment values, such as rationalism and progress, is Rennard Strickland's 1986 Kansas Law Review article, "Genocide-at-Law: An Historic and Contemporary View of the Native American Experience". In it, he "introduced Native American traditions and world-views" into law school curriculum, challenging the entrenchment at that time of the "contemporary ideas of progress and enlightenment". He wrote that US laws that "permeate" the everyday lives of Native Americans were in "most cases carried out with scrupulous legality" but still resulted in what he called "cultural genocide".
In 1993, David Theo Goldberg described how countries that adopt classical liberalism's concepts of "individualism, equality, and freedom"—such as the United States and European countries—conceal structural racism in their cultures and languages, citing terms such as "Third World" and "primitive".: 6–7
In 1988, Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw traced the origins of the New Right's use of the concept of color-blindness from 1970s neoconservative think tanks to the Ronald Reagan administration in the 1980s. She described how prominent figures such as neoconservative scholars Thomas Sowell and William Bradford Reynolds, who served as Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division from 1981 to 1988, called for "strictly color-blind policies". Sowell and Reynolds, like many conservatives at that time, believed that the goal of equality of the races had already been achieved, and therefore the race-specific civil rights movement was a "threat to democracy". The color-blindness logic used in "reverse discrimination" arguments in the post-civil rights period is informed by a particular viewpoint on "equality of opportunity", as adopted by Sowell, in which the state's role is limited to providing a "level playing field", not to promoting equal distribution of resources.
Crenshaw claimed that "equality of opportunity" in antidiscrimination law can have both an expansive and a restrictive aspect. Crenshaw wrote that formally color-blind laws continue to have racially discriminatory outcomes. According to her, this use of formal color-blindness rhetoric in claims of reverse discrimination, as in the 1978 Supreme Court ruling on Bakke, was a response to the way in which the courts had aggressively imposed affirmative action and busing during the Civil Rights era, even on those who were hostile to those issues. In 1990, legal scholar Duncan Kennedy described the dominant approach to affirmative action in legal academia as "colorblind meritocratic fundamentalism". He called for a postmodern "race consciousness" approach that included "political and cultural relations" while avoiding "racialism" and "essentialism".
Sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva describes this newer, subtle form of racism as "color-blind racism", which uses frameworks of abstract liberalism to decontextualize race, naturalize outcomes such as segregation in neighborhoods, attribute certain cultural practices to race, and cause "minimization of racism".
In his influential 1984 article, Delgado challenged the liberal concept of meritocracy in civil rights scholarship. He questioned how the top articles in most well-established journals were all written by white men.
Storytelling/counterstorytelling and "naming one's own reality"
This refers to the use of narrative (storytelling) to illuminate and explore lived experiences of racial oppression.
One of the prime tenets of liberal jurisprudence is that people can create appealing narratives to think and talk about greater levels of justice. Delgado and Stefancic call this the empathic fallacy—the belief that it is possible to "control our consciousness" by using language alone to overcome bigotry and narrow-mindedness. They examine how people of color, considered outsiders in mainstream US culture, are portrayed in media and law through stereotypes and stock characters that have been adapted over time to shield the dominant culture from discomfort and guilt. For example, slaves in the 18th-century Southern States were depicted as childlike and docile; Harriet Beecher Stowe adapted this stereotype through her character Uncle Tom, depicting him as a "gentle, long-suffering", pious Christian.
Following the American Civil War, the African-American woman was depicted as a wise, care-giving "Mammy" figure. During the Reconstruction period, African-American men were stereotyped as "brutish and bestial", a danger to white women and children. This was exemplified in Thomas Dixon Jr.'s novels, used as the basis for the epic film The Birth of a Nation, which celebrated the Ku Klux Klan and lynching. During the Harlem Renaissance, African-Americans were depicted as "musically talented" and "entertaining". Following World War II, when many Black veterans joined the nascent civil rights movement, African Americans were portrayed as "cocky [and] street-smart", the "unreasonable, opportunistic" militant, the "safe, comforting, cardigan-wearing" TV sitcom character, and the "super-stud" of blaxploitation films.
The empathic fallacy informs the "time-warp aspect of racism", where the dominant culture can see racism only through the hindsight of a past era or distant land, such as South Africa. Through centuries of stereotypes, racism has become normalized; it is a "part of the dominant narrative we use to interpret experience". Delgado and Stefancic argue that speech alone is an ineffective tool to counter racism, since the system of free expression tends to favor the interests of powerful elites and to assign responsibility for racist stereotypes to the "marketplace of ideas". In the decades following the passage of civil rights laws, acts of racism had become less overt and more covert—invisible to, and underestimated by, most of the dominant culture.
Since racism makes people feel uncomfortable, the empathic fallacy helps the dominant culture to mistakenly believe that it no longer exists, and that dominant images, portrayals, stock characters, and stereotypes—which usually portray minorities in a negative light—provide them with a true image of race in America.[citation needed] Based on these narratives, the dominant group has no need to feel guilty or to make an effort to overcome racism, as it feels "right, customary, and inoffensive to those engaged in it", while self-described liberals who uphold freedom of expression can feel virtuous while maintaining their own superior position.
Standpoint epistemology
This is the view that members of racial minority groups have a unique authority and ability to speak about racism. This is seen as undermining dominant narratives relating to racial inequality, such as legal neutrality and personal responsibility or bootstrapping, through valuable first-hand accounts of the experience of racism.
Revisionist interpretations of American civil rights law and progress
Interest convergence is a concept introduced by Derrick Bell in his 1980 Harvard Law Review article, "Brown v. Board of Education and the Interest-Convergence Dilemma". In this article, Bell described how he re-assessed the impact of the hundreds of NAACP LDF de-segregation cases he won from 1960 to 1966, and how he began to believe that in spite of his sincerity at the time, anti-discrimination law had not resulted in improving Black children's access to quality education. He listed and described how Supreme Court cases had gutted civil rights legislation, which had resulted in African-American students continuing to attend all-black schools that lacked adequate funding and resources. In examining these Supreme Court cases, Bell concluded that the only civil-rights legislation that was passed coincided with the self-interest of white people, which Bell termed interest convergence.
One of the best-known examples of interest convergence is the way in which American geopolitics during the Cold War in the aftermath of World War II was a critical factor in the passage of civil rights legislation by both Republicans and Democrats. Bell described this in numerous articles, including the aforementioned, and it was supported by the research and publications of legal scholar Mary L. Dudziak. In her journal articles and her 2000 book Cold War Civil Rights—based on newly released documents—Dudziak provided detailed evidence that it was in the interest of the United States to quell the negative international press about treatment of African-Americans when the majority of the populations of newly decolonized countries which the US was trying to attract to Western-style democracy, were not white. The US sought to promote liberal values throughout Africa, Asia, and Latin America to prevent the Soviet Union from spreading communism. Dudziak described how the international press widely circulated stories of segregation and violence against African-Americans.
The Moore's Ford lynchings, where a World War II veteran was lynched, were particularly widespread in the news. American allies followed stories of American racism through the international press, and the Soviets used stories of racism against Black Americans as a vital part of their propaganda. Dudziak performed extensive archival research in the US Department of State and Department of Justice and concluded that US government support for civil-rights legislation "was motivated in part by the concern that racial discrimination harmed the United States' foreign relations". When the National Guard was called in to prevent nine African-American students from integrating the Little Rock Central High School, the international press covered the story extensively. The then-Secretary of State told President Dwight Eisenhower that the Little Rock situation was "ruining" American foreign policy, particularly in Asia and Africa. The US's ambassador to the United Nations told President Eisenhower that as two-thirds of the world's population was not white, he was witnessing their negative reactions to American racial discrimination. He suspected that the US "lost several votes on the Chinese communist item because of Little Rock."
Intersectional theory
This refers to the examination of race, sex, class, national origin, and sexual orientation, and how their intersections play out in various settings, such as how the needs of a Latina are different from those of a Black male, and whose needs are promoted.[further explanation needed] These intersections provide a more holistic picture for evaluating different groups of people. Intersectionality is a response to identity politics insofar as identity politics does not take into account the different intersections of people's identities.
Essentialism vs. anti-essentialism
Delgado and Stefancic write, "Scholars who write about these issues are concerned with the appropriate unit for analysis: Is the black community one, or many, communities? Do middle- and working-class African-Americans have different interests and needs? Do all oppressed peoples have something in common?" This is a look at the ways that oppressed groups may share in their oppression but also have different needs and values that need to be analyzed differently. It is a question of how groups can be essentialized or are unable to be essentialized.[further explanation needed]
From an essentialist perspective, one's identity consists of an internal "essence" that is static and unchanging from birth, whereas a non-essentialist position holds that "the subject has no fixed or permanent identity." Racial essentialism diverges into biological and cultural essentialism, where subordinated groups may endorse one over the other. "Cultural and biological forms of racial essentialism share the idea that differences between racial groups are determined by a fixed and uniform essence that resides within and defines all members of each racial group. However, they differ in their understanding of the nature of this essence." Subordinated communities may be more likely to endorse cultural essentialism as it provides a basis of positive distinction for establishing a cumulative resistance as a means to assert their identities and advocacy of rights, whereas biological essentialism may be unlikely to resonate with marginalized groups as historically, dominant groups have used genetics and biology in justifying racism and oppression.
Essentialism is the idea of a singular, shared experience between a specific group of people. Anti-essentialism, on the other hand, believes that there are other various factors that can affect a person's being and their overall life experience. The race of an individual is viewed more as a social construct that does not necessarily dictate the outcome of their life circumstances. Race is viewed as "a social and historical construction, rather than an inherent, fixed, essential biological characteristic." Anti-essentialism "forces a destabilization in the very concept of race itself…" The results of this destabilization vary on the analytic focus falling into two general categories, "... consequences for the analytic concepts of racial identity or racial subjectivity."
Structural determinism, and race, sex, class, and their intersections
This refers to the exploration of how "the structure of legal thought or culture influences its content" in a way that determines social outcomes. Delgado and Stefancic cited "empathic fallacy" as one example of structural determinism—the "idea that our system, by reason of its structure and vocabulary, cannot redress certain types of wrong." They interrogate the absence of terms such as intersectionality, anti-essentialism, and jury nullification in standard legal reference research tools in law libraries.
Cultural nationalism/separatism
This refers to the exploration of more radical views that argue for separation and reparations as a form of foreign aid (including black nationalism).[example needed]
Legal institutions, critical pedagogy, and minorities in the bar
Camara Phyllis Jones defines institutionalized racism as "differential access to the goods, services, and opportunities of society by race. Institutionalized racism is normative, sometimes legalized and often manifests as inherited disadvantage. It is structural, having been absorbed into our institutions of custom, practice, and law, so there need not be an identifiable offender. Indeed, institutionalized racism is often evident as inaction in the face of need, manifesting itself both in material conditions and in access to power. With regard to the former, examples include differential access to quality education, sound housing, gainful employment, appropriate medical facilities, and a clean environment."
Black–white binary
The black–white binary is a paradigm identified by legal scholars through which racial issues and histories are typically articulated within a racial binary between black and white Americans. The binary largely governs how race has been portrayed and addressed throughout US history. Critical race theorists Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic argue that anti-discrimination law has blindspots for non-black minorities due to its language being confined within the black–white binary.
Applications and adaptations
Scholars of critical race theory have focused, with some particularity, on the issues of hate crime and hate speech. In response to the opinion of the US Supreme Court in the hate speech case of R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul (1992), in which the Court struck down an anti-bias ordinance as applied to a teenager who had burned a cross, Mari Matsuda and Charles Lawrence argued that the Court had paid insufficient attention to the history of racist speech and the actual injury produced by such speech.
Critical race theorists have also argued in favor of affirmative action. They propose that so-called merit standards for hiring and educational admissions are not race-neutral and that such standards are part of the rhetoric of neutrality through which whites justify their disproportionate share of resources and social benefits.
In his 2009 article "Will the Real CRT Please Stand Up: The Dangers of Philosophical Contributions to CRT", Curry distinguished between the original CRT key writings and what is being done in the name of CRT by a "growing number of white feminists". The new CRT movement "favors narratives that inculcate the ideals of a post-racial humanity and racial amelioration between compassionate (Black and White) philosophical thinkers dedicated to solving America's race problem." They are interested in discourse (i.e., how individuals speak about race) and the theories of white Continental philosophers, over and against the structural and institutional accounts of white supremacy which were at the heart of the realist analysis of racism introduced in Derrick Bell's early works,[97] and articulated through such African-American thinkers as W. E. B. Du Bois, Paul Robeson, and Judge Robert L. Carter.[98]
History
Early years
Although the terminology critical race theory began in its application to laws, the subject emerges from the broader frame of critical theory in how it analyzes power structures in society despite whatever laws may be in effect. In the 1998 article, "Critical Race Theory: Past, Present, and Future", Delgado and Stefancic trace the origins of CRT to the early writings of Derrick Albert Bell Jr. including his 1976 Yale Law Journal article, "Serving Two Masters" and his 1980 Harvard Law Review article entitled "Brown v. Board of Education and the Interest-Convergence Dilemma".
In the 1970s, as a professor at Harvard Law School Bell began to critique, question and re-assess the civil rights cases he had litigated in the 1960s to desegregate schools following the passage of Brown v. Board of Education. This re-assessment became the "cornerstone of critical race theory". Delgado and Stefancic, who together wrote Critical Race Theory: a Introduction in 2001, described Bell's "interest convergence" as a "means of understanding Western racial history". The focus on desegregation after the 1954 Supreme Court decision in Brown—declaring school segregation unconstitutional—left "civil-rights lawyers compromised between their clients' interests and the law". The concern of many Black parents—for their children's access to better education—was being eclipsed by the interests of litigators who wanted a "breakthrough" in their "pursuit of racial balance in schools". In 1995, Cornel West said that Bell was "virtually the lone dissenter" writing in leading law reviews who challenged basic assumptions about how the law treated people of color.
In his Harvard Law Review articles, Bell cites the 1964 Hudson v. Leake County School Board case which the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (NAACP LDF) won, mandating that the all-white school board comply with desegregation. At that time it was seen as a success. By the 1970s, White parents were removing their children from the desegregated schools and enrolling them in segregation academies. Bell came to believe that he had been mistaken in 1964 when, as a young lawyer working for the LDF, he had convinced Winson Hudson, who was the head of the newly formed local NAACP chapter in Harmony, Mississippi, to fight the all-White Leake County School Board to desegregate schools. She and the other Black parents had initially sought LDF assistance to fight the board's closure of their school—one of the historic Rosenwald Schools for Black children. Bell explained to Hudson, that—following Brown—the LDF could not fight to keep a segregated Black school open; they would have to fight for desegregation. In 1964, Bell and the NAACP had believed that resources for desegregated schools would be increased and Black children would access higher quality education, since White parents would insist on better quality schools; by the 1970s, Black children were again attending segregated schools and the quality of education had deteriorated.
Bell began to work for the NAACP LDF shortly after the Montgomery bus boycott and the ensuing 1956 Supreme Court ruling following Browder v. Gayle that the Alabama and Montgomery bus segregation laws were unconstitutional. From 1960 to 1966 Bell successfully litigated 300 civil rights cases in Mississippi. Bell was inspired by Thurgood Marshall, who had been one of the two leaders of a decades-long legal campaign starting in the 1930s, in which they filed hundreds of lawsuits to reverse the "separate but equal" doctrine announced by the Supreme Court's decision in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896). The Court ruled that racial segregation laws enacted by the states were not in violation of the United States Constitution as long as the facilities for each race were equal in quality. The Plessy decision provided the legal mandate at the federal level to enforce Jim Crow laws that had been introduced by white Southern Democrats starting in the 1870s for racial segregation in all public facilities, including public schools. The Court's 1954 Brown decision—which held that the "separate but equal" doctrine is unconstitutional in the context of public schools and educational facilities—severely weakened Plessy. The Supreme Court concept of constitutional colorblindness in regards to case evaluation began with Plessy. Before Plessy, the Court considered color as a determining factor in many landmark cases, which reinforced Jim Crow laws. Bell's 1960s civil rights work built on Justice Marshall's groundwork begun in the 1930s. It was a time when the legal branch of the civil rights movement was launching thousands of civil rights cases. It was a period of idealism for the civil rights movement.
At Harvard, Bell developed new courses that studied American law through a racial lens. He compiled his own course materials which were published in 1970 under the title Race, Racism, and American Law. He became Harvard Law School's first Black tenured professor in 1971.
During the 1970s, the courts were using legislation to enforce affirmative action programs and busing—where the courts mandated busing to achieve racial integration in school districts that rejected desegregation. In response, in the 1970s, neoconservative think tanks—hostile to these two issues in particular—developed a color-blind rhetoric to oppose them, claiming they represented reverse discrimination. In 1978, Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, when Bakke won this landmark Supreme Court case by using the argument of reverse racism, Bell's skepticism that racism would end increased. Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. held that the "guarantee of equal protection cannot mean one thing when applied to one individual and something else when applied to a person of another color." In a 1979 article, Bell asked if there were any groups of the White population that would be willing to suffer any disadvantage that might result from the implementation of a policy to rectify harms to Black people resulting from slavery, segregation, or discrimination.
Bell resigned in 1980 because of what he viewed as the university's discriminatory practices, became the dean at University of Oregon School of Law and later returned to Harvard as a visiting professor.
While he was absent from Harvard, his supporters organized protests against Harvard's lack of racial diversity in the curriculum, in the student body and in the faculty. The university had rejected student requests, saying no sufficiently qualified black instructor existed. Legal scholar Randall Kennedy writes that some students had "felt affronted" by Harvard's choice to employ an "archetypal white liberal... in a way that precludes the development of black leadership".
One of these students was Kimberlé Crenshaw, who had chosen Harvard in order to study under Bell; she was introduced to his work at Cornell. Crenshaw organized the student-led initiative to offer an alternative course on race and law in 1981—based on Bell's course and textbook—where students brought in visiting professors, such as , Linda Greene, , and Richard Delgado, to teach chapter-by-chapter from Race, Racism, and American Law.
Critical race theory emerged as an intellectual movement with the organization of this boycott; CRT scholars included graduate law students and professors.
Alan Freeman was a founding member of the Critical Legal Studies (CLS) movement that hosted forums in the 1980s. CLS legal scholars challenged claims to the alleged value-neutral position of the law. They criticized the legal system's role in generating and legitimizing oppressive social structures which contributed to maintaining an unjust and oppressive class system. Delgado and Stefancic cite the work of Alan Freeman in the 1970s as formative to critical race theory. In his 1978 Minnesota Law Review article Freeman reinterpreted, through a critical legal studies perspective, how the Supreme Court oversaw civil rights legislation from 1953 to 1969 under the Warren Court. He criticized the narrow interpretation of the law which denied relief for victims of racial discrimination. In his article, Freeman describes two perspectives on the concept of racial discrimination: that of victim or perpetrator. Racial discrimination to the victim includes both objective conditions and the "consciousness associated with those objective conditions". To the perpetrator, racial discrimination consists only of actions without consideration of the objective conditions experienced by the victims, such as the "lack of jobs, lack of money, lack of housing". Only those individuals who could prove they were victims of discrimination were deserving of remedies. By the late 1980s, Freeman, Bell, and other CRT scholars left the CLS movement claiming it was while neglecting the role of race and race relations in American law.
Emergence as a movement
This section may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral.(November 2021) |
In 1989, Kimberlé Crenshaw, , and organized a workshop at the University of Wisconsin-Madison entitled "New Developments in Critical Race Theory". The organizers coined the term "Critical Race Theory" to signify an "intersection of critical theory and race, racism and the law."
Afterward, legal scholars began publishing a higher volume of works employing critical race theory, including more than "300 leading law review articles" and books.: 108 In 1990, Duncan Kennedy published his article on affirmative action in legal academia in the Duke Law Journal, and Anthony E. Cook published his article "Beyond Critical Legal Studies" in the Harvard Law Review. In 1991, Patricia Williams published The Alchemy of Race and Rights, while Derrick Bell published Faces at the Bottom of the Well in 1992.: 124 Cheryl I. Harris published her 1993 Harvard Law Review article "Whiteness as Property" in which she described how passing led to benefits akin to owning property. In 1995, two dozen legal scholars contributed to a major compilation of key writings on CRT.
By the early 1990s, key concepts and features of CRT had emerged. Bell had introduced his concept of "interest convergence" in his 1973 article. He developed the concept of racial realism in a 1992 series of essays and book, Faces at the bottom of the well: the permanence of racism. He said that Black people needed to accept that the civil rights era legislation would not on its own bring about progress in race relations; anti-Black racism in the US was a "permanent fixture" of American society; and equality was "impossible and illusory" in the US. Crenshaw introduced the term intersectionality in the 1990s.
In 1995, pedagogical theorists Gloria Ladson-Billings and William F. Tate began applying the critical race theory framework in the field of education. In their 1995 article Ladson-Billings and Tate described the role of the social construction of white norms and interests in education. They sought to better understand inequities in schooling. Scholars have since expanded work to explore issues including school segregation in the US; relations between race, gender, and academic achievement; pedagogy; and research methodologies.
As of 2002[update], over 20 American law schools and at least three non-American law schools offered critical race theory courses or classes. Critical race theory is also applied in the fields of education, political science, women's studies, ethnic studies, communication, sociology, and American studies. Other movements developed that apply critical race theory to specific groups. These include the Latino-critical (), queer-critical, and Asian-critical movements. These continued to engage with the main body of critical theory research, over time developing independent priorities and research methods.
CRT has also been taught internationally, including in the United Kingdom (UK) and Australia.[failed verification] According to educational researcher , the main proponents of CRT in the UK include David Gillborn, , and .
Philosophical foundations
CRT scholars draw on the work of Antonio Gramsci, Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass, and W. E. B. DuBois. Bell shared Paul Robeson's belief that "Black self-reliance and African cultural continuity should form the epistemic basis of Blacks' worldview." Their writing is also informed by the 1960s and 1970s movements such as Black Power, Chicano, and radical feminism. Critical race theory shares many intellectual commitments with critical theory, critical legal studies, feminist jurisprudence, and postcolonial theory. University of Connecticut philosopher, Lewis Gordon, who has focused on postcolonial phenomenology, and race and racism, wrote that CRT is notable for its use of postmodern poststructural scholarship, including an emphasis on "subaltern" or "marginalized" communities and the "use of alternative methodology in the expression of theoretical work, most notably their use of "narratives" and other literary techniques".
Standpoint theory, which has been adopted by some CRT scholars, emerged from the first wave of the women's movement in the 1970s. The main focus of feminist standpoint theory is epistemology—the study of how knowledge is produced. The term was coined by Sandra Harding, an American feminist theorist, and developed by Dorothy Smith in her 1989 publication, The Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology. Smith wrote that by studying how women socially construct their own everyday life experiences, sociologists could ask new questions.Patricia Hill Collins introduced black feminist standpoint—a collective wisdom of those who have similar perspectives in society which sought to heighten awareness to these marginalized groups and provide ways to improve their position in society.
Critical race theory draws on the priorities and perspectives of both critical legal studies (CLS) and conventional civil rights scholarship, while also sharply contesting both of these fields. UC Davis School of Law legal scholar Angela P. Harris, describes critical race theory as sharing "a commitment to a vision of liberation from racism through right reason" with the civil rights tradition. It deconstructs some premises and arguments of legal theory and simultaneously holds that legally constructed rights are incredibly important.[143] CRT scholars disagreed with the CLS anti-legal rights stance, nor did they wish to "abandon the notions of law" completely; CRT legal scholars acknowledged that some legislation and reforms had helped people of color. As described by Derrick Bell, critical race theory in Harris' view is committed to "radical critique of the law (which is normatively deconstructionist) and... radical emancipation by the law (which is normatively reconstructionist)".
University of Edinburgh philosophy professor Tommy J. Curry says that by 2009, the CRT perspective on a race as a social construct was accepted by "many race scholars" as a "commonsense view" that race is not "biologically grounded and natural." Social construct is a term from social constructivism, whose roots can be traced to the early science wars, instigated in part by Thomas Kuhn's 1962 The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.Ian Hacking, a Canadian philosopher specializing in the philosophy of science, describes how social construction has spread through the social sciences. He cites the social construction of race as an example, asking how race could be "constructed" better.
Criticism
Academic criticism
According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, aspects of CRT have been criticized by "legal scholars and jurists from across the political spectrum." Criticism of CRT has focused on its emphasis on storytelling, its critique of the merit principle and of objective truth, and its thesis of the voice of color. As reported by Britannica, critics say it contains a "postmodernist-inspired skepticism of objectivity and truth" and has a tendency to interpret "any racial inequity or imbalance ... as proof of institutional racism and as grounds for directly imposing racially equitable outcomes in those realms". Proponents of CRT have also been accused of treating even well-meaning criticism of CRT as evidence of latent racism.
In a 1997 book, law professors Daniel A. Farber and Suzanna Sherry criticized CRT for basing its claims on personal narrative and for its lack of testable hypotheses and measurable data. CRT scholars including Crenshaw, Delgado, and Stefancic responded that such critiques represent dominant modes within social science which tend to exclude people of color. Delgado and Stefancic wrote: "In these realms [social science and politics], truth is a social construct created to suit the purposes of the dominant group." Farber and Sherry have also argued that anti-meritocratic tenets in critical race theory, critical feminism, and critical legal studies may unintentionally lead to antisemitic and anti-Asian implications. They write that the success of Jews and Asians within what critical race theorists posit to be a structurally unfair system may lend itself to allegations of cheating and advantage-taking. In response, Delgado and Stefancic write that there is a difference between criticizing an unfair system and criticizing individuals who perform well inside that system.
Public controversies
Critical race theory has stirred controversy in the United States for promoting the use of narrative in legal studies, advocating "legal instrumentalism" as opposed to ideal-driven uses of the law, and encouraging legal scholars to promote racial equity.
Before 1993, the term "critical race theory" was not part of public discourse. In the spring of that year, conservatives launched a campaign led by Clint Bolick to portray Lani Guinier—then-President Bill Clinton's nominee for Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights—as a radical because of her connection to CRT. Within months, Clinton had withdrawn the nomination, describing the effort to stop Guinier's appointment as "a campaign of right-wing distortion and vilification". This was part of a wider conservative strategy to shift the Supreme Court in their favor.
writes that the logic of legal instrumentalism reached wide public reception in the O. J. Simpson murder case when attorney Johnnie Cochran "enacted a sort of applied CRT", selecting an African-American jury and urging them to acquit Simpson in spite of the evidence against him—a form of jury nullification. Legal scholar Jeffrey Rosen calls this the "most striking example" of CRT's influence on the US legal system. Law professor responded to Rosen's assertion in the Michigan Law Review, saying that Cochran's "dramatic" and "controversial" courtroom "style and strategic sense" in the Simpson case resulted from his decades of experience as an attorney; it was not significantly influenced by CRT writings.
In 2010, a Mexican-American studies program in Tucson, Arizona, was halted because of a state law forbidding public schools from offering race-conscious education in the form of "advocat[ing] ethnic solidarity instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals". Certain books, including a primer on CRT, were banned from the curriculum.Matt de la Peña's young-adult novel Mexican WhiteBoy was banned for "containing 'critical race theory'" according to state officials. The ban on ethnic-studies programs was later deemed unconstitutional on the grounds that the state showed discriminatory intent: "Both enactment and enforcement were motivated by racial animus", federal Judge A. Wallace Tashima ruled.
2020s challenges
Since 2020, efforts have been made by conservatives and others to challenge critical race theory (CRT) being taught in schools in the United States. Following the 2020 protests of the murders of Ahmaud Arbery and George Floyd, as well as the killing of Breonna Taylor, school districts began to introduce additional curricula and create diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI)-positions to address "disparities stemming from race, economics, disabilities and other factors". These measures were met with criticism from conservatives, particularly those in the Republican Party. Political scientist Jennifer Victor of George Mason University has described this as part of a cycle of backlash against progress toward racial equality and equity.
Outspoken critics of critical race theory include U.S. president Donald Trump, conservative activist Christopher Rufo, various Republican officials, and conservative commentators on Fox News and right-wing talk radio shows. Movements have arisen from the controversy; in particular, the No Left Turn in Education movement, which has been described as one of the largest groups targeting school boards regarding critical race theory. In response to the assertion that CRT was being taught in public schools, dozens of states have introduced bills that limit what schools can teach regarding race, American history, politics, and gender.Subfields
Within critical race theory, various sub-groupings focus on issues and nuances unique to particular ethno-racial and/or marginalized communities. This includes the intersection of race with disability, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, class, or religion. For example, disability critical race studies (DisCrit), critical race feminism (CRF), Jewish Critical Race Theory (HebCrit, pronounced "Heeb"), Black Critical Race Theory (Black Crit), (LatCrit), Asian American critical race studies (AsianCrit), South Asian American critical race studies (DesiCrit), Quantitative Critical Race Theory (QuantCrit), Queer Critical Race Theory (QueerCrit), and American Indian critical race studies or Tribal critical race theory (sometimes called TribalCrit). CRT methodologies have also been applied to the study of white immigrant groups. CRT has spurred some scholars to call for a second wave of whiteness studies, which is now a small offshoot known as Second Wave Whiteness (SWW). Critical race theory has also begun to spawn research that looks at understandings of race outside the United States.
Disability critical race theory
Another offshoot field is disability critical race studies (DisCrit), which combines disability studies and CRT to focus on the intersection of disability and race.
Latino critical race theory
Latino critical race theory (LatCRT or LatCrit) is a research framework that outlines the social construction of race as central to how people of color are constrained and oppressed in society. Race scholars developed LatCRT as a critical response to the "problem of the color line" first explained by W. E. B. Du Bois. While CRT focuses on the Black–White paradigm, LatCRT has moved to consider other racial groups, mainly Chicana/Chicanos, as well as Latinos/as, Asians, Native Americans/First Nations, and women of color.
In Critical Race Counterstories along the Chicana/Chicano Educational Pipeline, Tara J. Yosso discusses how the constraint of POC can be defined. Looking at the differences between Chicana/o students, the tenets that separate such individuals are: the intercentricity of race and racism, the challenge of dominant ideology, the commitment to social justice, the centrality of experience knowledge, and the interdisciplinary perspective.
LatCRTs main focus is to advocate social justice for those living in marginalized communities (specifically Chicana/os), who are guided by structural arrangements that disadvantage people of color. Arrangements where Social institutions function as dispossessions, disenfranchisement, and discrimination over minority groups. In an attempt to give voice to those who are victimized, LatCRT has created two common themes:
First, CRT proposes that white supremacy and racial power are maintained over time, a process that the law plays a central role in. Different racial groups lack the voice to speak in this civil society, and, as such, CRT has introduced a new critical form of expression, called the voice of color. The voice of color is narratives and storytelling monologues used as devices for conveying personal racial experiences. These are also used to counter metanarratives that continue to maintain racial inequality. Therefore, the experiences of the oppressed are important aspects for developing a LatCRT analytical approach, and it has not been since the rise of slavery that an institution has so fundamentally shaped the life opportunities of those who bear the label of criminal.
Secondly, LatCRT work has investigated the possibility of transforming the relationship between law enforcement and racial power, as well as pursuing a project of achieving racial emancipation and anti-subordination more broadly. Its body of research is distinct from general critical race theory in that it emphasizes immigration theory and policy, language rights, and accent- and national origin-based forms of discrimination. CRT finds the experiential knowledge of people of color and draws explicitly from these lived experiences as data, presenting research findings through storytelling, chronicles, scenarios, narratives, and parables.
Asian critical race theory
Asian critical race theory looks at the influence of race and racism on Asian Americans and their experiences in the US education system. Like Latino critical race theory, Asian critical race theory is distinct from the main body of CRT in its emphasis on immigration theory and policy.
Tribal critical race theory
Critical Race Theory evolved in the 1970s in response to Critical Legal Studies. Tribal Critical Theory (TribalCrit) focuses on stories and values oral data as a primary source of information. TribalCrit builds on the idea that White supremacy and imperialism underpin US policies toward Indigenous peoples. In contrast with CRT, it argues that colonization rather than racism is endemic to society. A key tenet of TribalCrit is that Indigenous people exist within a US society that both politicizes and racializes them, placing them in a "liminal space" where Indigenous self-representation is at odds with how others perceive them. TribalCrit argues that ideas of culture, information, and power take on new importance when inspected through a Native lens. TribalCrit rejects goals of assimilation in US educational institutions, and argues that understanding the lived realities of Indigenous peoples is dependent on comprehending tribal philosophies, beliefs, traditions, and visions for the future.
Critical philosophy of race
The Critical Philosophy of Race (CPR) is inspired by both Critical Legal Studies and Critical Race Theory's use of interdisciplinary scholarship. Both CLS and CRT explore the covert nature of mainstream use of "apparently neutral concepts, such as merit or freedom."
See also
- Anti-bias curriculum
- Anti-subordination principle
- Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory
- Cultural hegemony
- Institutional or systemic racism
- Judicial aspects of race in the United States
- Racism in the United States
- Slavery in the United States
- White privilege
Notes
- Wallace-Wells, Benjamin (June 18, 2021). "How a Conservative Activist Invented the Conflict Over Critical Race Theory". The New Yorker. Retrieved June 19, 2021.
- Meckler, Laura; Dawsey, Josh (June 21, 2021). "Republicans, spurred by an unlikely figure, see political promise in critical race theory". The Washington Post. Vol. 144. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved June 19, 2021.
- Iati, Marisa (May 29, 2021). "What is critical race theory, and why do Republicans want to ban it in schools?". The Washington Post.
Rather than encouraging white people to feel guilty, Thomas said critical race theorists aim to shift focus away from individual people's bad actions and toward how systems uphold racial disparities.
- Kahn, Chris (July 15, 2021). "Many Americans embrace falsehoods about critical race theory". Reuters. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
- Christian, Michelle; Seamster, Louise; Ray, Victor (November 2019). "New Directions in Critical Race Theory and Sociology: Racism, White Supremacy, and Resistance". American Behavioral Scientist. 63 (13): 1731–1740. doi:10.1177/0002764219842623. S2CID 151160318.
- Yosso, Tara; Solórzano, Daniel G (2005). "Conceptualizing a critical race theory in sociology". In Romero, Mary (ed.). The Blackwell Companion to Social Inequalities.
- Borter, Gabriella (September 22, 2021). "Explainer: What 'critical race theory' means and why it's igniting debate". Reuters. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
- Gillborn 2015, p. 278.
- Curry 2009a, p. 166.
- Gillborn, David; Ladson-Billings, Gloria (2020). "Critical Race Theory". In Paul Atkinson; et al. (eds.). SAGE Research Methods Foundations. Theoretical Foundations of Qualitative Research. SAGE Publications. doi:10.4135/9781526421036764633. ISBN 978-1-5264-2103-6. S2CID 240846071.
- Bridges 2019.
- Ruparelia 2019, pp. 77–89.
- Milner, Richard (March 2013). "Analyzing Poverty, Learning, and Teaching Through a Critical Race Theory Lens". Review of Research in Education. 37 (1): 1–53. doi:10.3102/0091732X12459720. JSTOR 24641956. S2CID 146634183.
- Crenshaw 1991; Crenshaw 1989.
- Ansell 2008, pp. 344–345.
- Crenshaw 2019, pp. 52–84.
- "Critical race theory". Encyclopaedia Britannica. September 21, 2021. Archived from the original on November 22, 2021.
- Ansell 2008, pp. 344–345; Bridges 2019, p. 7; Crenshaw et al. 1995, p. xiii.
- Ansell 2008, p. 344; Cole 2007, pp. 112–113: "CRT was a reaction to Critical Legal Studies (CLS) ... CRT was a response to CLS, criticizing the latter for its undue emphasis on class and economic structure, and insisting that 'race' is a more critical identity."
- Bridges 2021, 2:06.
- Crenshaw et al. 1995, p. xxvii. "Indeed, the organizers coined the term 'Critical Race Theory' to make it clear that our work locates itself in intersection of critical theory and race, racism and the law."
- Ansell 2008, p. 344.
- Cabrera 2018, p. 213.
- Wallace-Wells, Benjamin (June 18, 2021). "How a Conservative Activist Invented the Conflict Over Critical Race Theory". The New Yorker. OCLC 909782404. Archived from the original on June 18, 2021.
- Caroline Kelly (September 5, 2020). "Trump bars 'propaganda' training sessions on race in latest overture to his base". CNN.
- Duhaney, Patrina (March 8, 2022). "Why does critical race theory make people so uncomfortable?". The Conversation. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
- Bump, Philip (June 15, 2021). "Analysis | The Scholar Strategy: How 'critical race theory' alarms could convert racial anxiety into political energy". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on June 22, 2021.
- Harris 2021.
- West 1995, p. xi.
- Brooks 1994, p. 85.
- Ladson-Billings & Tate 1995.
- Gillborn 2015; Ladson-Billings 1998.
- Ladson-Billings 1998, p. 7.
- "Examine critical race theory (CRT)". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Video with transcript. Archived from the original on November 24, 2021.
- Bell 1992.
- McCristal-Culp 1992, p. 1149.
- Hancock 2016, p. 192; Crenshaw 1989.
- Cesario 2008, pp. 201–212; Bell 1980.
- Harnois 2010; Collins 2009.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1993.
- Kennedy 1995; Kennedy 1990.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1993, p. 462.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1993; Strickland 1997.
- Goldberg, David Theo (1993). Racist Culture: Philosophy and the Politics of Meaning. Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-18078-4.
- Crenshaw 1988, p. 103.
- Crenshaw 1988, p. 104–105.
- Crenshaw 1988, p. 104.
- Crenshaw 1988, p. 106.
- Kennedy 1990, p. 705.
- Bonilla-Silva 2020; Bonilla-Silva 2010, p. 26.
- Alcoff 2021.
- Alcoff 2021; Delgado 1984.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, p. 1276.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, p. 1261.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, pp. 1262–1263.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, p. 1263–1264.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, pp. 1264–1265.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, p. 1266.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, pp. 1266–1267.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, p. 1278.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, p. 1279.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, pp. 1284–1285.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, pp. 1286–1287.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, p. 1282.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1992, p. 1288.
- Leonardo 2013, pp. 603–604; Ansell 2008, p. 345.
- Bell 1980.
- Wright & Cobb 2021.
- Shih, David (April 19, 2017). "A Theory To Better Understand Diversity, And Who Really Benefits". Code Switch. NPR. Retrieved October 20, 2021.
- Ogbonnaya-Ogburu, Ihudiya Finda; Smith, Angela D.R.; To, Alexandra; Toyama, Kentaro (2020). "Critical Race Theory for HCI". Proceedings of the 2020 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. pp. 1–16. doi:10.1145/3313831.3376392. ISBN 978-1-4503-6708-0. S2CID 218483077.
Those with power rarely concede it without interest convergence. Racism benefits some groups, and those groups are reluctant to move against it. They will take or allow anti-racist actions most often when it also confers their benefits. In the US context, the forward movement for civil rights has typically only occurred when it is materially in the interest of the White majority.
- Bell 1989, p. [page needed]; Dudziak 2000, p. [page needed].
- Dudziak 2000; Ioffe 2017.
- Dudziak 2000, p. 15.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2017, pp. 25–26; Dudziak 1988.
- Dudziak 2000, pp. 119–121.
- Dudziak 1997.
- Ioffe 2017.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2012, pp. 51–55.
- Crenshaw 1991.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2017, pp. 63–66.
- Zilliacus, Harriet; Paulsrud, BethAnne; Holm, Gunilla (April 3, 2017). "Essentializing vs. non-essentializing students' cultural identities: curricular discourses in Finland and Sweden". Journal of Multicultural Discourses. 12 (2): 166–180. doi:10.1080/17447143.2017.1311335. S2CID 49215486.
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- "Race and Racial Identity". National Museum of African American History and Culture. Retrieved December 1, 2022.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2012, pp. 26, 155.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2001, p. 26.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2001, p. 27.
- Jones 2002, pp. 9–10.
- Perea, Juan (1997). "The Black/White Binary Paradigm of Race: The 'Normal Science' of American Racial Thought". California Law Review, la Raza Journal. 85 (5): 1213–1258. doi:10.2307/3481059. JSTOR 3481059.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2017, p. 76.
- Matsuda, Mari J.; Lawrence, Charles R. (1993). "Epilogue: Burning Crosses and the R. A. V. Case". Words That Wound: Critical Race Theory, Assaultive Speech, And The First Amendment (1st ed.). Westview Press. pp. 133–136. ISBN 978-0-429-50294-1.
- Delgado 1995.
- Kennedy 1990.
- Williams 1991.
- Curry 2009b, p. 1.
- Curry 2009b, p. 2.
- Curry 2011, p. [page needed].
- Curry 2009b, p. [page needed].
- Delgado & Stefancic 1998a, p. 467; Delgado & Stefancic 2001, p. 30; Bell 1976.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1998a; Bell 1980.
- Friedman, Jonathan (November 8, 2021). Educational Gag Orders: Legislative Restrictions on the Freedom to Read, Learn, and Teach (Report). New York: PEN America. Archived from the original on November 9, 2021.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2001.
- Delgado & Stefancic 1998a, p. 467.
- Jackson, Lauren Michele (July 7, 2021). "The Void That Critical Race Theory Was Created to Fill". The New Yorker. Retrieved November 8, 2021.
- Bell 1976; Bell 1980.
- Cobb, Jelani (September 13, 2021). "The Man Behind Critical Race Theory". The New Yorker. Retrieved November 14, 2021.
- Wright & Cobb 2021; Bell 1976; Bell 1980.
- "Montgomery Bus Boycott". Civil Rights Movement Archive.
- Groves, Harry E. (1951). "Separate but Equal—The Doctrine of Plessy v. Ferguson". Phylon. 12 (1): 66–72. doi:10.2307/272323. JSTOR 272323.
- Schauer, Frederick (1997). "Generality and Equality". Law and Philosophy. 16 (3): 279–97. doi:10.2307/3504874. JSTOR 3504874.
- Gotanda 1991.
- Bell 1970.
- Bell 1979a.
- Crenshaw et al. 1995, pp. xix–xx.
- Buras, Kristen L. (2014). "From Carter G. Woodson to Critical Race Curriculum Studies". In Dixson, Adrienne D. (ed.). Researching Race in Education: Policy, Practice, and Qualitative Research. Charlotte, N.C.: Information Age Publishing. pp. 49–50. ISBN 978-1-6239-6678-2.
When Bell departed from Harvard to lead the University of Oregon School of Law, Harvard's law students of color demanded that another faculty member of color be hired to replace him.
- Crenshaw et al. 1995, p. xx: "The liberal white Harvard administration responded to student protests, demonstrations, rallies, and sit-ins—including a takeover of the Dean's office—by asserting that there were no qualified black scholars who merited Harvard's interest."
- Kennedy, Randall L. (June 1989). "Racial Critiques of Legal Academia". Harvard Law Review. 102 (8): 1745–1819. doi:10.2307/1341357. JSTOR 1341357.
- Cook et al. 2021, c.14:36.
- Cook et al. 2021.
- Gottesman, Isaac (2016). "Critical Race Theory and Legal Studies". The Critical Turn in Education: From Marxist Critique to Poststructuralist Feminism to Critical Theories of Race. London: Taylor & Francis. p. 123. ISBN 978-1-3176-7095-7.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2001, p. 30.
- Freeman, Alan David (January 1, 1978). "Legitimizing Racial Discrimination through Antidiscrimination law: A Critical Review of Supreme Court Doctrine". Minnesota Law Review. 62 (73).
- Yosso 2005, p. 71.
- Ladson-Billings, Gloria (2021). Critical Race Theory in Education: A Scholar's Journey. Teachers College Press. ISBN 978-0-8077-6583-8.
- Kennedy 1990; Kennedy 1995.
- Cook, Anthony E. (1990). "Beyond Critical Legal Studies: The Reconstructive Theology of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr". Harvard Law Review. 103 (5): 985–1044. doi:10.2307/1341453. JSTOR 1341453.
- Harris 1993.
- Warren, James (September 5, 1993). "'Whiteness as Property'". Chicago Tribune.
- Crenshaw et al. 1995, p. xiii.
- Gillborn 2015; Crenshaw 1991.
- Curry 2008, pp. 35–36; Ladson-Billings 1998, pp. 7–24; Ladson-Billings & Tate 1995.
- Donnor, Jamel; Ladson-Billings, Gloria (2017). "Critical Race Theory and the Postracial Imaginary". In Denzin, Norman; Lincoln, Yvonna (eds.). The SAGE handbook of qualitative research (5th ed.). Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications. p. 366. ISBN 978-1-4833-4980-0.
- Harris 2002, p. 1216: "Over twenty American law schools offer courses in Critical Race Theory or include Critical Race Theory as a central part of other courses. Critical Race Theory is a formal course in a number of universities in the United States and in at least three foreign law schools."
- Delgado & Stefancic 2017, pp. 7–8.
- "Critical Race Theory". Centre for Research in Race and Education; University of Birmingham. Retrieved June 25, 2021.
- Quinn, Karl (November 6, 2020). "Are all white people racist? Why Critical Race Theory has us rattled". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
- Cole, Mike (2009). "Critical Race Theory comes to the UK: A Marxist response". Ethnicities. 9 (2): 246–269. doi:10.1177/1468796809103462. S2CID 144325161.
- Curry 2011, p. 4.
- Gordon 1999.
- Borland, Elizabeth. "Standpoint theory". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
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- Harris 1994, pp. 741–743.
- Crenshaw et al. 1995, p. xxiv: "To the emerging race crits, rights discourse held a social and transformative value in the context of racial subordination that transcended the narrower question of whether reliance on rights alone could bring about any determinate results"; Harris 1994, p. [page needed].
- Bell 1995, p. 899.
- Mallon 2007.
- Hacking 2003.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2017, p. 102.
- Cabrera 2018, p. 213; Farber & Sherry 1997a.
- Cabrera 2018, p. 213.
- Hernández-Truyol, Berta E.; Harris, Angela P.; Valdes, Francisco (2006). "Beyond the First Decade: A Forward-Looking History of LatCrit Theory, Community and Praxis". Berkeley la Raza Law Journal. SSRN 2666047.
- Farber, Daniel A.; Sherry, Suzanna (May 1995). "Is the Radical Critique of Merit Anti-Semitic?". California Law Review. 83 (3): 853. doi:10.2307/3480866. hdl:1803/6607. JSTOR 3480866.
Therefore, the authors suggest, the radical critique of merit has the wholly unintended consequence of being anti-Semitic and possibly racist.
- Farber & Sherry 1997a.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2017, pp. 103–104.
- Ansell 2008, pp. 345–346.
- Holmes 1997.
- Harris 2021; Locin & Tackett 1993.
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- Ansell 2008, p. 346.
- Rosen 1996.
- Russell 1997, Note 67, p. 791.
- Gillborn, David (2014). "Racism as Policy: A Critical Race Analysis of Education Reforms in the United States and England". The Educational Forum. 78 (1): 30–31. doi:10.1080/00131725.2014.850982. S2CID 144670114.
- Winerip, Michael (March 19, 2012). "Racial Lens Used to Cull Curriculum in Arizona". The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 8, 2017.
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- Carr (2022).
- Wilson (2021).
- Dawsey & Stein (2020); Lang (2020); Waxman (2021); Education Week (2021).
- Gross (2022).
- Rubin, Daniel Ian (July 3, 2020). "Hebcrit: a new dimension of critical race theory". Social Identities. 26 (4): 499–514. doi:10.1080/13504630.2020.1773778. S2CID 219923352.
- Yosso 2005, p. 72; Delgado & Stefancic 1998b.
- Yosso 2005, p. 72.
- Harpalani 2013.
- Castillo, Wendy; Gillborn, David (March 9, 2022). "How to "QuantCrit:" Practices and Questions for Education Data Researchers and Users".
- Gil De Lamadrid, Daniel (2023). "QueerCrit: The Intersection of Queerness and the Black-White Binary". Academia.
- Myslinska 2014a, pp. 559–660.
- Jupp, Berry & Lensmire 2016.
- Myslinska 2014b.
- See e.g., Levin 2008.
- Annamma, Connor & Ferri 2012.
- Treviño, Harris & Wallace 2008.
- Yosso 2006, p. 7.
- Yosso 2005.
- Delgado & Stefancic 2001, p. 6.
- Yosso 2006.
- Iftikar, Jon S.; Museus, Samuel D. (November 26, 2018). "On the utility of Asian critical (AsianCrit) theory in the field of education". International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education. 31 (10): 935–949. doi:10.1080/09518398.2018.1522008. S2CID 149949621.
- Brayboy, Bryan McKinley Jones (December 2005). "Toward a Tribal Critical Race Theory in Education". The Urban Review. 37 (5): 425–446. doi:10.1007/s11256-005-0018-y. S2CID 145515195.
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Further reading
- Delgado, Richard, ed. (1995). Critical Race Theory: The Cutting Edge. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 978-1-5663-9347-8.
- Dixson, Adrienne D.; Rousseau, Celia K., eds. (2006). Critical Race Theory in Education: All God's Children Got a Song. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-95292-7.
- Epstein, Kitty Kelly (2006). A Different View of Urban Schools: Civil Rights, Critical Race Theory, and Unexplored Realities. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-0-8204-7879-1.
- Fortin, Jacey (November 8, 2021). "Critical Race Theory: A Brief History". The New York Times.
- Gillborn, David; Dixson, Adrienne D.; Ladson-Billings, Gloria; Parker, Laurence; Rollock, Nicola; Warmington, Paul, eds. (2018). Critical Race Theory in Education (1st ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-84827-6.
- Goldberg, David Theo (May 2, 2021). "The War on Critical Race Theory". Boston Review.
- Taylor, Edward (Spring 1998). "A Primer on Critical Race Theory: Who are the critical race theorists and what are they saying?". Journal of Blacks in Higher Education (19): 122–124. doi:10.2307/2998940. JSTOR 2998940.
Critical race theory CRT is an academic field focused on the relationships between social conceptions of race and ethnicity social and political laws and mass media CRT also considers racism to be systemic in various laws and rules not based only on individuals prejudices The word critical in the name is an academic reference to critical theory rather than criticizing or blaming individuals CRT is also used in sociology to explain social political and legal structures and power distribution as through a lens focusing on the concept of race and experiences of racism For example the CRT conceptual framework examines racial bias in laws and legal institutions such as highly disparate rates of incarceration among racial groups in the United States A key CRT concept is intersectionality the way in which different forms of inequality and identity are affected by interconnections of race class gender and disability Scholars of CRT view race as a social construct with no biological basis One tenet of CRT is that disparate racial outcomes are the result of complex changing and often subtle social and institutional dynamics rather than explicit and intentional prejudices of individuals CRT scholars argue that the social and legal construction of race advances the interests of white people at the expense of people of color and that the liberal notion of U S law as neutral plays a significant role in maintaining a racially unjust social order where formally color blind laws continue to have racially discriminatory outcomes CRT began in the United States in the post civil rights era as 1960s landmark civil rights laws were being eroded and schools were being re segregated With racial inequalities persisting even after civil rights legislation and color blind laws were enacted CRT scholars in the 1970s and 1980s began reworking and expanding critical legal studies CLS theories on class economic structure and the law to examine the role of US law in perpetuating racism CRT a framework of analysis grounded in critical theory originated in the mid 1970s in the writings of several American legal scholars including Derrick Bell Alan Freeman Kimberle Crenshaw Richard Delgado Cheryl Harris Charles R Lawrence III Mari Matsuda and Patricia J Williams CRT draws on the work of thinkers such as Antonio Gramsci Sojourner Truth Frederick Douglass and W E B Du Bois as well as the Black Power Chicano and radical feminist movements from the 1960s and 1970s Academic critics of CRT argue it is based on storytelling instead of evidence and reason rejects truth and merit and undervalues liberalism Since 2020 conservative US lawmakers have sought to ban or restrict the teaching of CRT in primary and secondary schools as well as relevant training inside federal agencies Advocates of such bans argue that CRT is false anti American villainizes white people promotes radical leftism and indoctrinates children Advocates of bans on CRT have been accused of misrepresenting its tenets and of having the goal to broadly silence discussions of racism equality social justice and the history of race DefinitionsIn his introduction to the comprehensive 1995 publication of critical race theory s key writings Cornel West described CRT as an intellectual movement that is both particular to our postmodern and conservative times and part of a long tradition of human resistance and liberation Law professor Roy L Brooks defined critical race theory in 1994 as a collection of critical stances against the existing legal order from a race based point of view Gloria Ladson Billings who along with co author William Tate had introduced CRT to the field of education in 1995 described it in 2015 as an interdisciplinary approach that seeks to understand and combat race inequity in society Ladson Billings wrote in 1998 that CRT first emerged as a counterlegal scholarship to the positivist and liberal legal discourse of civil rights In 2021 Khiara Bridges a law professor and author of the textbook Critical Race Theory A Primer defined critical race theory as an intellectual movement a body of scholarship and an analytical toolset for interrogating the relationship between law and racial inequality The 2021 Encyclopaedia Britannica described CRT as an intellectual and social movement and loosely organized framework of legal analysis based on the premise that race is not a natural biologically grounded feature of physically distinct subgroups of human beings but a socially constructed culturally invented category that is used to oppress and exploit people of colour TenetsScholars of CRT say that race is not biologically grounded and natural rather it is a socially constructed category used to oppress and exploit people of color and that racism is not an aberration but a normalized feature of American society According to CRT negative stereotypes assigned to members of minority groups benefit white people and increase racial oppression Individuals can belong to a number of different identity groups The concept of intersectionality one of CRT s main concepts was introduced by legal scholar Kimberle Crenshaw Derrick Albert Bell Jr 1930 2011 an American lawyer professor and civil rights activist wrote that racial equality is impossible and illusory and that racism in the US is permanent According to Bell civil rights legislation will not on its own bring about progress in race relations alleged improvements or advantages to people of color tend to serve the interests of dominant white groups in what Bell called interest convergence These changes do not typically affect and at times even reinforce racial hierarchies This is representative of the shift in the 1970s in Bell s re assessment of his earlier desegregation work as a civil rights lawyer He was responding to the Supreme Court s decisions that had resulted in the re segregation of schools The concept of standpoint theory became particularly relevant to CRT when it was expanded to include a black feminist standpoint by Patricia Hill Collins First introduced by feminist sociologists in the 1980s standpoint theory holds that people in marginalized groups who share similar experiences can bring a collective wisdom and a unique voice to discussions on decreasing oppression In this view insights into racism can be uncovered by examining the nature of the US legal system through the perspective of the everyday lived experiences of people of color According to Encyclopedia Britannica tenets of CRT have spread beyond academia and are used to deepen understanding of socio economic issues such as poverty police brutality and voting rights violations that are affected by the ways in which race and racism are understood and misunderstood in the United States Common themesThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these messages This section may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent sources July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message This article or section possibly contains original synthesis Source material should verifiably mention and relate to the main topic Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic published an annotated bibliography of CRT references in 1993 listing works of legal scholarship that addressed one or more of the following themes critique of liberalism storytelling counterstorytelling and naming one s own reality revisionist interpretations of American civil rights law and progress a greater understanding of the underpinnings of race and racism structural determinism race sex class and their intersections essentialism and anti essentialism cultural nationalism separatism legal institutions critical pedagogy and minorities in the bar and criticism and self criticism When Gloria Ladson Billings introduced CRT into education in 1995 she cautioned that its application required a thorough analysis of the legal literature upon which it is based Critique of liberalism First and foremost to CRT legal scholars in 1993 was their discontent with the way in which liberalism addressed race issues in the US They critiqued liberal jurisprudence including affirmative action color blindness role modeling and the merit principle Specifically they claimed that the liberal concept of value neutral law contributed to maintenance of the US s racially unjust social order An example questioning foundational liberal conceptions of Enlightenment values such as rationalism and progress is Rennard Strickland s 1986 Kansas Law Review article Genocide at Law An Historic and Contemporary View of the Native American Experience In it he introduced Native American traditions and world views into law school curriculum challenging the entrenchment at that time of the contemporary ideas of progress and enlightenment He wrote that US laws that permeate the everyday lives of Native Americans were in most cases carried out with scrupulous legality but still resulted in what he called cultural genocide In 1993 David Theo Goldberg described how countries that adopt classical liberalism s concepts of individualism equality and freedom such as the United States and European countries conceal structural racism in their cultures and languages citing terms such as Third World and primitive 6 7 In 1988 Kimberle Williams Crenshaw traced the origins of the New Right s use of the concept of color blindness from 1970s neoconservative think tanks to the Ronald Reagan administration in the 1980s She described how prominent figures such as neoconservative scholars Thomas Sowell and William Bradford Reynolds who served as Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division from 1981 to 1988 called for strictly color blind policies Sowell and Reynolds like many conservatives at that time believed that the goal of equality of the races had already been achieved and therefore the race specific civil rights movement was a threat to democracy The color blindness logic used in reverse discrimination arguments in the post civil rights period is informed by a particular viewpoint on equality of opportunity as adopted by Sowell in which the state s role is limited to providing a level playing field not to promoting equal distribution of resources Crenshaw claimed that equality of opportunity in antidiscrimination law can have both an expansive and a restrictive aspect Crenshaw wrote that formally color blind laws continue to have racially discriminatory outcomes According to her this use of formal color blindness rhetoric in claims of reverse discrimination as in the 1978 Supreme Court ruling on Bakke was a response to the way in which the courts had aggressively imposed affirmative action and busing during the Civil Rights era even on those who were hostile to those issues In 1990 legal scholar Duncan Kennedy described the dominant approach to affirmative action in legal academia as colorblind meritocratic fundamentalism He called for a postmodern race consciousness approach that included political and cultural relations while avoiding racialism and essentialism Sociologist Eduardo Bonilla Silva describes this newer subtle form of racism as color blind racism which uses frameworks of abstract liberalism to decontextualize race naturalize outcomes such as segregation in neighborhoods attribute certain cultural practices to race and cause minimization of racism In his influential 1984 article Delgado challenged the liberal concept of meritocracy in civil rights scholarship He questioned how the top articles in most well established journals were all written by white men Storytelling counterstorytelling and naming one s own reality This refers to the use of narrative storytelling to illuminate and explore lived experiences of racial oppression One of the prime tenets of liberal jurisprudence is that people can create appealing narratives to think and talk about greater levels of justice Delgado and Stefancic call this the empathic fallacy the belief that it is possible to control our consciousness by using language alone to overcome bigotry and narrow mindedness They examine how people of color considered outsiders in mainstream US culture are portrayed in media and law through stereotypes and stock characters that have been adapted over time to shield the dominant culture from discomfort and guilt For example slaves in the 18th century Southern States were depicted as childlike and docile Harriet Beecher Stowe adapted this stereotype through her character Uncle Tom depicting him as a gentle long suffering pious Christian Following the American Civil War the African American woman was depicted as a wise care giving Mammy figure During the Reconstruction period African American men were stereotyped as brutish and bestial a danger to white women and children This was exemplified in Thomas Dixon Jr s novels used as the basis for the epic film The Birth of a Nation which celebrated the Ku Klux Klan and lynching During the Harlem Renaissance African Americans were depicted as musically talented and entertaining Following World War II when many Black veterans joined the nascent civil rights movement African Americans were portrayed as cocky and street smart the unreasonable opportunistic militant the safe comforting cardigan wearing TV sitcom character and the super stud of blaxploitation films The empathic fallacy informs the time warp aspect of racism where the dominant culture can see racism only through the hindsight of a past era or distant land such as South Africa Through centuries of stereotypes racism has become normalized it is a part of the dominant narrative we use to interpret experience Delgado and Stefancic argue that speech alone is an ineffective tool to counter racism since the system of free expression tends to favor the interests of powerful elites and to assign responsibility for racist stereotypes to the marketplace of ideas In the decades following the passage of civil rights laws acts of racism had become less overt and more covert invisible to and underestimated by most of the dominant culture Since racism makes people feel uncomfortable the empathic fallacy helps the dominant culture to mistakenly believe that it no longer exists and that dominant images portrayals stock characters and stereotypes which usually portray minorities in a negative light provide them with a true image of race in America citation needed Based on these narratives the dominant group has no need to feel guilty or to make an effort to overcome racism as it feels right customary and inoffensive to those engaged in it while self described liberals who uphold freedom of expression can feel virtuous while maintaining their own superior position Standpoint epistemology This is the view that members of racial minority groups have a unique authority and ability to speak about racism This is seen as undermining dominant narratives relating to racial inequality such as legal neutrality and personal responsibility or bootstrapping through valuable first hand accounts of the experience of racism Revisionist interpretations of American civil rights law and progress Interest convergence is a concept introduced by Derrick Bell in his 1980 Harvard Law Review article Brown v Board of Education and the Interest Convergence Dilemma In this article Bell described how he re assessed the impact of the hundreds of NAACP LDF de segregation cases he won from 1960 to 1966 and how he began to believe that in spite of his sincerity at the time anti discrimination law had not resulted in improving Black children s access to quality education He listed and described how Supreme Court cases had gutted civil rights legislation which had resulted in African American students continuing to attend all black schools that lacked adequate funding and resources In examining these Supreme Court cases Bell concluded that the only civil rights legislation that was passed coincided with the self interest of white people which Bell termed interest convergence One of the best known examples of interest convergence is the way in which American geopolitics during the Cold War in the aftermath of World War II was a critical factor in the passage of civil rights legislation by both Republicans and Democrats Bell described this in numerous articles including the aforementioned and it was supported by the research and publications of legal scholar Mary L Dudziak In her journal articles and her 2000 book Cold War Civil Rights based on newly released documents Dudziak provided detailed evidence that it was in the interest of the United States to quell the negative international press about treatment of African Americans when the majority of the populations of newly decolonized countries which the US was trying to attract to Western style democracy were not white The US sought to promote liberal values throughout Africa Asia and Latin America to prevent the Soviet Union from spreading communism Dudziak described how the international press widely circulated stories of segregation and violence against African Americans The Moore s Ford lynchings where a World War II veteran was lynched were particularly widespread in the news American allies followed stories of American racism through the international press and the Soviets used stories of racism against Black Americans as a vital part of their propaganda Dudziak performed extensive archival research in the US Department of State and Department of Justice and concluded that US government support for civil rights legislation was motivated in part by the concern that racial discrimination harmed the United States foreign relations When the National Guard was called in to prevent nine African American students from integrating the Little Rock Central High School the international press covered the story extensively The then Secretary of State told President Dwight Eisenhower that the Little Rock situation was ruining American foreign policy particularly in Asia and Africa The US s ambassador to the United Nations told President Eisenhower that as two thirds of the world s population was not white he was witnessing their negative reactions to American racial discrimination He suspected that the US lost several votes on the Chinese communist item because of Little Rock Intersectional theory This refers to the examination of race sex class national origin and sexual orientation and how their intersections play out in various settings such as how the needs of a Latina are different from those of a Black male and whose needs are promoted further explanation needed These intersections provide a more holistic picture for evaluating different groups of people Intersectionality is a response to identity politics insofar as identity politics does not take into account the different intersections of people s identities Essentialism vs anti essentialism Delgado and Stefancic write Scholars who write about these issues are concerned with the appropriate unit for analysis Is the black community one or many communities Do middle and working class African Americans have different interests and needs Do all oppressed peoples have something in common This is a look at the ways that oppressed groups may share in their oppression but also have different needs and values that need to be analyzed differently It is a question of how groups can be essentialized or are unable to be essentialized further explanation needed From an essentialist perspective one s identity consists of an internal essence that is static and unchanging from birth whereas a non essentialist position holds that the subject has no fixed or permanent identity Racial essentialism diverges into biological and cultural essentialism where subordinated groups may endorse one over the other Cultural and biological forms of racial essentialism share the idea that differences between racial groups are determined by a fixed and uniform essence that resides within and defines all members of each racial group However they differ in their understanding of the nature of this essence Subordinated communities may be more likely to endorse cultural essentialism as it provides a basis of positive distinction for establishing a cumulative resistance as a means to assert their identities and advocacy of rights whereas biological essentialism may be unlikely to resonate with marginalized groups as historically dominant groups have used genetics and biology in justifying racism and oppression Essentialism is the idea of a singular shared experience between a specific group of people Anti essentialism on the other hand believes that there are other various factors that can affect a person s being and their overall life experience The race of an individual is viewed more as a social construct that does not necessarily dictate the outcome of their life circumstances Race is viewed as a social and historical construction rather than an inherent fixed essential biological characteristic Anti essentialism forces a destabilization in the very concept of race itself The results of this destabilization vary on the analytic focus falling into two general categories consequences for the analytic concepts of racial identity or racial subjectivity Structural determinism and race sex class and their intersections This refers to the exploration of how the structure of legal thought or culture influences its content in a way that determines social outcomes Delgado and Stefancic cited empathic fallacy as one example of structural determinism the idea that our system by reason of its structure and vocabulary cannot redress certain types of wrong They interrogate the absence of terms such as intersectionality anti essentialism and jury nullification in standard legal reference research tools in law libraries Cultural nationalism separatism This refers to the exploration of more radical views that argue for separation and reparations as a form of foreign aid including black nationalism example needed Legal institutions critical pedagogy and minorities in the bar Camara Phyllis Jones defines institutionalized racism as differential access to the goods services and opportunities of society by race Institutionalized racism is normative sometimes legalized and often manifests as inherited disadvantage It is structural having been absorbed into our institutions of custom practice and law so there need not be an identifiable offender Indeed institutionalized racism is often evident as inaction in the face of need manifesting itself both in material conditions and in access to power With regard to the former examples include differential access to quality education sound housing gainful employment appropriate medical facilities and a clean environment Black white binary The black white binary is a paradigm identified by legal scholars through which racial issues and histories are typically articulated within a racial binary between black and white Americans The binary largely governs how race has been portrayed and addressed throughout US history Critical race theorists Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic argue that anti discrimination law has blindspots for non black minorities due to its language being confined within the black white binary Applications and adaptationsScholars of critical race theory have focused with some particularity on the issues of hate crime and hate speech In response to the opinion of the US Supreme Court in the hate speech case of R A V v City of St Paul 1992 in which the Court struck down an anti bias ordinance as applied to a teenager who had burned a cross Mari Matsuda and Charles Lawrence argued that the Court had paid insufficient attention to the history of racist speech and the actual injury produced by such speech Critical race theorists have also argued in favor of affirmative action They propose that so called merit standards for hiring and educational admissions are not race neutral and that such standards are part of the rhetoric of neutrality through which whites justify their disproportionate share of resources and social benefits In his 2009 article Will the Real CRT Please Stand Up The Dangers of Philosophical Contributions to CRT Curry distinguished between the original CRT key writings and what is being done in the name of CRT by a growing number of white feminists The new CRT movement favors narratives that inculcate the ideals of a post racial humanity and racial amelioration between compassionate Black and White philosophical thinkers dedicated to solving America s race problem They are interested in discourse i e how individuals speak about race and the theories of white Continental philosophers over and against the structural and institutional accounts of white supremacy which were at the heart of the realist analysis of racism introduced in Derrick Bell s early works 97 and articulated through such African American thinkers as W E B Du Bois Paul Robeson and Judge Robert L Carter 98 HistoryEarly years Although the terminology critical race theory began in its application to laws the subject emerges from the broader frame of critical theory in how it analyzes power structures in society despite whatever laws may be in effect In the 1998 article Critical Race Theory Past Present and Future Delgado and Stefancic trace the origins of CRT to the early writings of Derrick Albert Bell Jr including his 1976 Yale Law Journal article Serving Two Masters and his 1980 Harvard Law Review article entitled Brown v Board of Education and the Interest Convergence Dilemma In the 1970s as a professor at Harvard Law School Bell began to critique question and re assess the civil rights cases he had litigated in the 1960s to desegregate schools following the passage of Brown v Board of Education This re assessment became the cornerstone of critical race theory Delgado and Stefancic who together wrote Critical Race Theory a Introduction in 2001 described Bell s interest convergence as a means of understanding Western racial history The focus on desegregation after the 1954 Supreme Court decision in Brown declaring school segregation unconstitutional left civil rights lawyers compromised between their clients interests and the law The concern of many Black parents for their children s access to better education was being eclipsed by the interests of litigators who wanted a breakthrough in their pursuit of racial balance in schools In 1995 Cornel West said that Bell was virtually the lone dissenter writing in leading law reviews who challenged basic assumptions about how the law treated people of color In his Harvard Law Review articles Bell cites the 1964 Hudson v Leake County School Board case which the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund NAACP LDF won mandating that the all white school board comply with desegregation At that time it was seen as a success By the 1970s White parents were removing their children from the desegregated schools and enrolling them in segregation academies Bell came to believe that he had been mistaken in 1964 when as a young lawyer working for the LDF he had convinced Winson Hudson who was the head of the newly formed local NAACP chapter in Harmony Mississippi to fight the all White Leake County School Board to desegregate schools She and the other Black parents had initially sought LDF assistance to fight the board s closure of their school one of the historic Rosenwald Schools for Black children Bell explained to Hudson that following Brown the LDF could not fight to keep a segregated Black school open they would have to fight for desegregation In 1964 Bell and the NAACP had believed that resources for desegregated schools would be increased and Black children would access higher quality education since White parents would insist on better quality schools by the 1970s Black children were again attending segregated schools and the quality of education had deteriorated Bell began to work for the NAACP LDF shortly after the Montgomery bus boycott and the ensuing 1956 Supreme Court ruling following Browder v Gayle that the Alabama and Montgomery bus segregation laws were unconstitutional From 1960 to 1966 Bell successfully litigated 300 civil rights cases in Mississippi Bell was inspired by Thurgood Marshall who had been one of the two leaders of a decades long legal campaign starting in the 1930s in which they filed hundreds of lawsuits to reverse the separate but equal doctrine announced by the Supreme Court s decision in Plessy v Ferguson 1896 The Court ruled that racial segregation laws enacted by the states were not in violation of the United States Constitution as long as the facilities for each race were equal in quality The Plessy decision provided the legal mandate at the federal level to enforce Jim Crow laws that had been introduced by white Southern Democrats starting in the 1870s for racial segregation in all public facilities including public schools The Court s 1954 Brown decision which held that the separate but equal doctrine is unconstitutional in the context of public schools and educational facilities severely weakened Plessy The Supreme Court concept of constitutional colorblindness in regards to case evaluation began with Plessy Before Plessy the Court considered color as a determining factor in many landmark cases which reinforced Jim Crow laws Bell s 1960s civil rights work built on Justice Marshall s groundwork begun in the 1930s It was a time when the legal branch of the civil rights movement was launching thousands of civil rights cases It was a period of idealism for the civil rights movement At Harvard Bell developed new courses that studied American law through a racial lens He compiled his own course materials which were published in 1970 under the title Race Racism and American Law He became Harvard Law School s first Black tenured professor in 1971 During the 1970s the courts were using legislation to enforce affirmative action programs and busing where the courts mandated busing to achieve racial integration in school districts that rejected desegregation In response in the 1970s neoconservative think tanks hostile to these two issues in particular developed a color blind rhetoric to oppose them claiming they represented reverse discrimination In 1978 Regents of the University of California v Bakke when Bakke won this landmark Supreme Court case by using the argument of reverse racism Bell s skepticism that racism would end increased Justice Lewis F Powell Jr held that the guarantee of equal protection cannot mean one thing when applied to one individual and something else when applied to a person of another color In a 1979 article Bell asked if there were any groups of the White population that would be willing to suffer any disadvantage that might result from the implementation of a policy to rectify harms to Black people resulting from slavery segregation or discrimination Bell resigned in 1980 because of what he viewed as the university s discriminatory practices became the dean at University of Oregon School of Law and later returned to Harvard as a visiting professor While he was absent from Harvard his supporters organized protests against Harvard s lack of racial diversity in the curriculum in the student body and in the faculty The university had rejected student requests saying no sufficiently qualified black instructor existed Legal scholar Randall Kennedy writes that some students had felt affronted by Harvard s choice to employ an archetypal white liberal in a way that precludes the development of black leadership One of these students was Kimberle Crenshaw who had chosen Harvard in order to study under Bell she was introduced to his work at Cornell Crenshaw organized the student led initiative to offer an alternative course on race and law in 1981 based on Bell s course and textbook where students brought in visiting professors such as Linda Greene and Richard Delgado to teach chapter by chapter from Race Racism and American Law Critical race theory emerged as an intellectual movement with the organization of this boycott CRT scholars included graduate law students and professors Alan Freeman was a founding member of the Critical Legal Studies CLS movement that hosted forums in the 1980s CLS legal scholars challenged claims to the alleged value neutral position of the law They criticized the legal system s role in generating and legitimizing oppressive social structures which contributed to maintaining an unjust and oppressive class system Delgado and Stefancic cite the work of Alan Freeman in the 1970s as formative to critical race theory In his 1978 Minnesota Law Review article Freeman reinterpreted through a critical legal studies perspective how the Supreme Court oversaw civil rights legislation from 1953 to 1969 under the Warren Court He criticized the narrow interpretation of the law which denied relief for victims of racial discrimination In his article Freeman describes two perspectives on the concept of racial discrimination that of victim or perpetrator Racial discrimination to the victim includes both objective conditions and the consciousness associated with those objective conditions To the perpetrator racial discrimination consists only of actions without consideration of the objective conditions experienced by the victims such as the lack of jobs lack of money lack of housing Only those individuals who could prove they were victims of discrimination were deserving of remedies By the late 1980s Freeman Bell and other CRT scholars left the CLS movement claiming it was while neglecting the role of race and race relations in American law Emergence as a movement This section may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent sources November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message In 1989 Kimberle Crenshaw and organized a workshop at the University of Wisconsin Madison entitled New Developments in Critical Race Theory The organizers coined the term Critical Race Theory to signify an intersection of critical theory and race racism and the law Afterward legal scholars began publishing a higher volume of works employing critical race theory including more than 300 leading law review articles and books 108 In 1990 Duncan Kennedy published his article on affirmative action in legal academia in the Duke Law Journal and Anthony E Cook published his article Beyond Critical Legal Studies in the Harvard Law Review In 1991 Patricia Williams published The Alchemy of Race and Rights while Derrick Bell published Faces at the Bottom of the Well in 1992 124 Cheryl I Harris published her 1993 Harvard Law Review article Whiteness as Property in which she described how passing led to benefits akin to owning property In 1995 two dozen legal scholars contributed to a major compilation of key writings on CRT By the early 1990s key concepts and features of CRT had emerged Bell had introduced his concept of interest convergence in his 1973 article He developed the concept of racial realism in a 1992 series of essays and book Faces at the bottom of the well the permanence of racism He said that Black people needed to accept that the civil rights era legislation would not on its own bring about progress in race relations anti Black racism in the US was a permanent fixture of American society and equality was impossible and illusory in the US Crenshaw introduced the term intersectionality in the 1990s In 1995 pedagogical theorists Gloria Ladson Billings and William F Tate began applying the critical race theory framework in the field of education In their 1995 article Ladson Billings and Tate described the role of the social construction of white norms and interests in education They sought to better understand inequities in schooling Scholars have since expanded work to explore issues including school segregation in the US relations between race gender and academic achievement pedagogy and research methodologies As of 2002 update over 20 American law schools and at least three non American law schools offered critical race theory courses or classes Critical race theory is also applied in the fields of education political science women s studies ethnic studies communication sociology and American studies Other movements developed that apply critical race theory to specific groups These include the Latino critical queer critical and Asian critical movements These continued to engage with the main body of critical theory research over time developing independent priorities and research methods CRT has also been taught internationally including in the United Kingdom UK and Australia failed verification According to educational researcher the main proponents of CRT in the UK include David Gillborn and Philosophical foundations CRT scholars draw on the work of Antonio Gramsci Sojourner Truth Frederick Douglass and W E B DuBois Bell shared Paul Robeson s belief that Black self reliance and African cultural continuity should form the epistemic basis of Blacks worldview Their writing is also informed by the 1960s and 1970s movements such as Black Power Chicano and radical feminism Critical race theory shares many intellectual commitments with critical theory critical legal studies feminist jurisprudence and postcolonial theory University of Connecticut philosopher Lewis Gordon who has focused on postcolonial phenomenology and race and racism wrote that CRT is notable for its use of postmodern poststructural scholarship including an emphasis on subaltern or marginalized communities and the use of alternative methodology in the expression of theoretical work most notably their use of narratives and other literary techniques Standpoint theory which has been adopted by some CRT scholars emerged from the first wave of the women s movement in the 1970s The main focus of feminist standpoint theory is epistemology the study of how knowledge is produced The term was coined by Sandra Harding an American feminist theorist and developed by Dorothy Smith in her 1989 publication The Everyday World as Problematic A Feminist Sociology Smith wrote that by studying how women socially construct their own everyday life experiences sociologists could ask new questions Patricia Hill Collins introduced black feminist standpoint a collective wisdom of those who have similar perspectives in society which sought to heighten awareness to these marginalized groups and provide ways to improve their position in society Critical race theory draws on the priorities and perspectives of both critical legal studies CLS and conventional civil rights scholarship while also sharply contesting both of these fields UC Davis School of Law legal scholar Angela P Harris describes critical race theory as sharing a commitment to a vision of liberation from racism through right reason with the civil rights tradition It deconstructs some premises and arguments of legal theory and simultaneously holds that legally constructed rights are incredibly important 143 CRT scholars disagreed with the CLS anti legal rights stance nor did they wish to abandon the notions of law completely CRT legal scholars acknowledged that some legislation and reforms had helped people of color As described by Derrick Bell critical race theory in Harris view is committed to radical critique of the law which is normatively deconstructionist and radical emancipation by the law which is normatively reconstructionist University of Edinburgh philosophy professor Tommy J Curry says that by 2009 the CRT perspective on a race as a social construct was accepted by many race scholars as a commonsense view that race is not biologically grounded and natural Social construct is a term from social constructivism whose roots can be traced to the early science wars instigated in part by Thomas Kuhn s 1962 The Structure of Scientific Revolutions Ian Hacking a Canadian philosopher specializing in the philosophy of science describes how social construction has spread through the social sciences He cites the social construction of race as an example asking how race could be constructed better CriticismAcademic criticism According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica aspects of CRT have been criticized by legal scholars and jurists from across the political spectrum Criticism of CRT has focused on its emphasis on storytelling its critique of the merit principle and of objective truth and its thesis of the voice of color As reported by Britannica critics say it contains a postmodernist inspired skepticism of objectivity and truth and has a tendency to interpret any racial inequity or imbalance as proof of institutional racism and as grounds for directly imposing racially equitable outcomes in those realms Proponents of CRT have also been accused of treating even well meaning criticism of CRT as evidence of latent racism In a 1997 book law professors Daniel A Farber and Suzanna Sherry criticized CRT for basing its claims on personal narrative and for its lack of testable hypotheses and measurable data CRT scholars including Crenshaw Delgado and Stefancic responded that such critiques represent dominant modes within social science which tend to exclude people of color Delgado and Stefancic wrote In these realms social science and politics truth is a social construct created to suit the purposes of the dominant group Farber and Sherry have also argued that anti meritocratic tenets in critical race theory critical feminism and critical legal studies may unintentionally lead to antisemitic and anti Asian implications They write that the success of Jews and Asians within what critical race theorists posit to be a structurally unfair system may lend itself to allegations of cheating and advantage taking In response Delgado and Stefancic write that there is a difference between criticizing an unfair system and criticizing individuals who perform well inside that system Public controversies Critical race theory has stirred controversy in the United States for promoting the use of narrative in legal studies advocating legal instrumentalism as opposed to ideal driven uses of the law and encouraging legal scholars to promote racial equity Before 1993 the term critical race theory was not part of public discourse In the spring of that year conservatives launched a campaign led by Clint Bolick to portray Lani Guinier then President Bill Clinton s nominee for Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights as a radical because of her connection to CRT Within months Clinton had withdrawn the nomination describing the effort to stop Guinier s appointment as a campaign of right wing distortion and vilification This was part of a wider conservative strategy to shift the Supreme Court in their favor writes that the logic of legal instrumentalism reached wide public reception in the O J Simpson murder case when attorney Johnnie Cochran enacted a sort of applied CRT selecting an African American jury and urging them to acquit Simpson in spite of the evidence against him a form of jury nullification Legal scholar Jeffrey Rosen calls this the most striking example of CRT s influence on the US legal system Law professor responded to Rosen s assertion in the Michigan Law Review saying that Cochran s dramatic and controversial courtroom style and strategic sense in the Simpson case resulted from his decades of experience as an attorney it was not significantly influenced by CRT writings In 2010 a Mexican American studies program in Tucson Arizona was halted because of a state law forbidding public schools from offering race conscious education in the form of advocat ing ethnic solidarity instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals Certain books including a primer on CRT were banned from the curriculum Matt de la Pena s young adult novel Mexican WhiteBoy was banned for containing critical race theory according to state officials The ban on ethnic studies programs was later deemed unconstitutional on the grounds that the state showed discriminatory intent Both enactment and enforcement were motivated by racial animus federal Judge A Wallace Tashima ruled 2020s challenges This section is an excerpt from 2020s controversies around critical race theory edit State laws restricting race education in the United States as of July 2022 States with laws restricting education on race in classrooms or state agencies States considering bills or policies that would restrict race education in schools or state agencies States that failed to pass this type of legislation States that have not introduced legislation on this topic Since 2020 efforts have been made by conservatives and others to challenge critical race theory CRT being taught in schools in the United States Following the 2020 protests of the murders of Ahmaud Arbery and George Floyd as well as the killing of Breonna Taylor school districts began to introduce additional curricula and create diversity equity and inclusion DEI positions to address disparities stemming from race economics disabilities and other factors These measures were met with criticism from conservatives particularly those in the Republican Party Political scientist Jennifer Victor of George Mason University has described this as part of a cycle of backlash against progress toward racial equality and equity Outspoken critics of critical race theory include U S president Donald Trump conservative activist Christopher Rufo various Republican officials and conservative commentators on Fox News and right wing talk radio shows Movements have arisen from the controversy in particular the No Left Turn in Education movement which has been described as one of the largest groups targeting school boards regarding critical race theory In response to the assertion that CRT was being taught in public schools dozens of states have introduced bills that limit what schools can teach regarding race American history politics and gender SubfieldsWithin critical race theory various sub groupings focus on issues and nuances unique to particular ethno racial and or marginalized communities This includes the intersection of race with disability ethnicity gender sexuality class or religion For example disability critical race studies DisCrit critical race feminism CRF Jewish Critical Race Theory HebCrit pronounced Heeb Black Critical Race Theory Black Crit LatCrit Asian American critical race studies AsianCrit South Asian American critical race studies DesiCrit Quantitative Critical Race Theory QuantCrit Queer Critical Race Theory QueerCrit and American Indian critical race studies or Tribal critical race theory sometimes called TribalCrit CRT methodologies have also been applied to the study of white immigrant groups CRT has spurred some scholars to call for a second wave of whiteness studies which is now a small offshoot known as Second Wave Whiteness SWW Critical race theory has also begun to spawn research that looks at understandings of race outside the United States Disability critical race theory Another offshoot field is disability critical race studies DisCrit which combines disability studies and CRT to focus on the intersection of disability and race Latino critical race theory Latino critical race theory LatCRT or LatCrit is a research framework that outlines the social construction of race as central to how people of color are constrained and oppressed in society Race scholars developed LatCRT as a critical response to the problem of the color line first explained by W E B Du Bois While CRT focuses on the Black White paradigm LatCRT has moved to consider other racial groups mainly Chicana Chicanos as well as Latinos as Asians Native Americans First Nations and women of color In Critical Race Counterstories along the Chicana Chicano Educational Pipeline Tara J Yosso discusses how the constraint of POC can be defined Looking at the differences between Chicana o students the tenets that separate such individuals are the intercentricity of race and racism the challenge of dominant ideology the commitment to social justice the centrality of experience knowledge and the interdisciplinary perspective LatCRTs main focus is to advocate social justice for those living in marginalized communities specifically Chicana os who are guided by structural arrangements that disadvantage people of color Arrangements where Social institutions function as dispossessions disenfranchisement and discrimination over minority groups In an attempt to give voice to those who are victimized LatCRT has created two common themes First CRT proposes that white supremacy and racial power are maintained over time a process that the law plays a central role in Different racial groups lack the voice to speak in this civil society and as such CRT has introduced a new critical form of expression called the voice of color The voice of color is narratives and storytelling monologues used as devices for conveying personal racial experiences These are also used to counter metanarratives that continue to maintain racial inequality Therefore the experiences of the oppressed are important aspects for developing a LatCRT analytical approach and it has not been since the rise of slavery that an institution has so fundamentally shaped the life opportunities of those who bear the label of criminal Secondly LatCRT work has investigated the possibility of transforming the relationship between law enforcement and racial power as well as pursuing a project of achieving racial emancipation and anti subordination more broadly Its body of research is distinct from general critical race theory in that it emphasizes immigration theory and policy language rights and accent and national origin based forms of discrimination CRT finds the experiential knowledge of people of color and draws explicitly from these lived experiences as data presenting research findings through storytelling chronicles scenarios narratives and parables Asian critical race theory Asian critical race theory looks at the influence of race and racism on Asian Americans and their experiences in the US education system Like Latino critical race theory Asian critical race theory is distinct from the main body of CRT in its emphasis on immigration theory and policy Tribal critical race theory Critical Race Theory evolved in the 1970s in response to Critical Legal Studies Tribal Critical Theory TribalCrit focuses on stories and values oral data as a primary source of information TribalCrit builds on the idea that White supremacy and imperialism underpin US policies toward Indigenous peoples In contrast with CRT it argues that colonization rather than racism is endemic to society A key tenet of TribalCrit is that Indigenous people exist within a US society that both politicizes and racializes them placing them in a liminal space where Indigenous self representation is at odds with how others perceive them TribalCrit argues that ideas of culture information and power take on new importance when inspected through a Native lens TribalCrit rejects goals of assimilation in US educational institutions and argues that understanding the lived realities of Indigenous peoples is dependent on comprehending tribal philosophies beliefs traditions and visions for the future Critical philosophy of race The Critical Philosophy of Race CPR is inspired by both Critical Legal Studies and Critical Race Theory s use of interdisciplinary scholarship Both CLS and CRT explore the covert nature of mainstream use of apparently neutral concepts such as merit or freedom See alsoWikiquote has quotations related to Critical race theory Anti bias curriculum Anti subordination principle Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory Cultural hegemony Institutional or systemic racism Judicial aspects of race in the United States Racism in the United States Slavery in the United States White privilegeNotesWallace Wells Benjamin June 18 2021 How a Conservative Activist Invented the Conflict Over Critical Race Theory The New Yorker Retrieved June 19 2021 Meckler Laura Dawsey Josh June 21 2021 Republicans spurred by an unlikely figure see political promise in critical race theory The Washington Post Vol 144 ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved June 19 2021 Iati Marisa May 29 2021 What is critical race theory and why do Republicans want to ban it in schools The Washington Post Rather than encouraging white people to feel guilty Thomas said critical race theorists aim to shift focus away from individual people s bad actions and toward how systems uphold racial disparities Kahn Chris July 15 2021 Many Americans embrace falsehoods about critical race theory Reuters Retrieved January 22 2022 Christian Michelle Seamster Louise Ray Victor November 2019 New Directions in Critical Race Theory and Sociology Racism White Supremacy and Resistance American Behavioral Scientist 63 13 1731 1740 doi 10 1177 0002764219842623 S2CID 151160318 Yosso Tara Solorzano Daniel G 2005 Conceptualizing a critical race theory in sociology In Romero Mary ed The Blackwell Companion to Social Inequalities Borter Gabriella September 22 2021 Explainer What critical race theory means and why it s igniting debate Reuters Retrieved January 22 2022 Gillborn 2015 p 278 Curry 2009a p 166 Gillborn David Ladson Billings Gloria 2020 Critical Race Theory In Paul Atkinson et al eds SAGE Research Methods Foundations Theoretical Foundations of Qualitative Research SAGE Publications doi 10 4135 9781526421036764633 ISBN 978 1 5264 2103 6 S2CID 240846071 Bridges 2019 Ruparelia 2019 pp 77 89 Milner Richard March 2013 Analyzing Poverty Learning and Teaching Through a Critical Race Theory Lens Review of Research in Education 37 1 1 53 doi 10 3102 0091732X12459720 JSTOR 24641956 S2CID 146634183 Crenshaw 1991 Crenshaw 1989 Ansell 2008 pp 344 345 Crenshaw 2019 pp 52 84 Critical race theory Encyclopaedia Britannica September 21 2021 Archived from the original on November 22 2021 Ansell 2008 pp 344 345 Bridges 2019 p 7 Crenshaw et al 1995 p xiii Ansell 2008 p 344 Cole 2007 pp 112 113 CRT was a reaction to Critical Legal Studies CLS CRT was a response to CLS criticizing the latter for its undue emphasis on class and economic structure and insisting that race is a more critical identity Bridges 2021 2 06 Crenshaw et al 1995 p xxvii Indeed the organizers coined the term Critical Race Theory to make it clear that our work locates itself in intersection of critical theory and race racism and the law Ansell 2008 p 344 Cabrera 2018 p 213 Wallace Wells Benjamin June 18 2021 How a Conservative Activist Invented the Conflict Over Critical Race Theory The New Yorker OCLC 909782404 Archived from the original on June 18 2021 Caroline Kelly September 5 2020 Trump bars propaganda training sessions on race in latest overture to his base CNN Duhaney Patrina March 8 2022 Why does critical race theory make people so uncomfortable The Conversation Retrieved March 15 2022 Bump Philip June 15 2021 Analysis The Scholar Strategy How critical race theory alarms could convert racial anxiety into political energy The Washington Post Archived from the original on June 22 2021 Harris 2021 West 1995 p xi Brooks 1994 p 85 Ladson Billings amp Tate 1995 Gillborn 2015 Ladson Billings 1998 Ladson Billings 1998 p 7 Examine critical race theory CRT Encyclopaedia Britannica Video with transcript Archived from the original on November 24 2021 Bell 1992 McCristal Culp 1992 p 1149 Hancock 2016 p 192 Crenshaw 1989 Cesario 2008 pp 201 212 Bell 1980 Harnois 2010 Collins 2009 Delgado amp Stefancic 1993 Kennedy 1995 Kennedy 1990 Delgado amp Stefancic 1993 p 462 Delgado amp Stefancic 1993 Strickland 1997 Goldberg David Theo 1993 Racist Culture Philosophy and the Politics of Meaning Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 18078 4 Crenshaw 1988 p 103 Crenshaw 1988 p 104 105 Crenshaw 1988 p 104 Crenshaw 1988 p 106 Kennedy 1990 p 705 Bonilla Silva 2020 Bonilla Silva 2010 p 26 Alcoff 2021 Alcoff 2021 Delgado 1984 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 p 1276 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 p 1261 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 pp 1262 1263 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 p 1263 1264 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 pp 1264 1265 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 p 1266 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 pp 1266 1267 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 p 1278 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 p 1279 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 pp 1284 1285 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 pp 1286 1287 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 p 1282 Delgado amp Stefancic 1992 p 1288 Leonardo 2013 pp 603 604 Ansell 2008 p 345 Bell 1980 Wright amp Cobb 2021 Shih David April 19 2017 A Theory To Better Understand Diversity And Who Really Benefits Code Switch NPR Retrieved October 20 2021 Ogbonnaya Ogburu Ihudiya Finda Smith Angela D R To Alexandra Toyama Kentaro 2020 Critical Race Theory for HCI Proceedings of the 2020 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems pp 1 16 doi 10 1145 3313831 3376392 ISBN 978 1 4503 6708 0 S2CID 218483077 Those with power rarely concede it without interest convergence Racism benefits some groups and those groups are reluctant to move against it They will take or allow anti racist actions most often when it also confers their benefits In the US context the forward movement for civil rights has typically only occurred when it is materially in the interest of the White majority Bell 1989 p page needed Dudziak 2000 p page needed Dudziak 2000 Ioffe 2017 Dudziak 2000 p 15 Delgado amp Stefancic 2017 pp 25 26 Dudziak 1988 Dudziak 2000 pp 119 121 Dudziak 1997 Ioffe 2017 Delgado amp Stefancic 2012 pp 51 55 Crenshaw 1991 Delgado amp Stefancic 2017 pp 63 66 Zilliacus Harriet Paulsrud BethAnne Holm Gunilla April 3 2017 Essentializing vs non essentializing students cultural identities curricular discourses in Finland and Sweden Journal of Multicultural Discourses 12 2 166 180 doi 10 1080 17447143 2017 1311335 S2CID 49215486 Soylu Yalcinkaya Nur Estrada Villalta Sara Adams Glenn 2017 The Biological or Cultural Essence of Essentialism Implications for Policy Support among Dominant and Subordinated Groups Frontiers in Psychology 8 900 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2017 00900 PMC 5447748 PMID 28611723 Van Wagenen Aimee 2007 The Promise and Impossibility of Representing Anti Essentialism Reading Bulworth Through Critical Race Theory Race Gender amp Class 14 1 2 157 177 JSTOR 41675202 ProQuest 218827114 Race and Racial Identity National Museum of African American History and Culture Retrieved December 1 2022 Delgado amp Stefancic 2012 pp 26 155 Delgado amp Stefancic 2001 p 26 Delgado amp Stefancic 2001 p 27 Jones 2002 pp 9 10 Perea Juan 1997 The Black White Binary Paradigm of Race The Normal Science of American Racial Thought California Law Review la Raza Journal 85 5 1213 1258 doi 10 2307 3481059 JSTOR 3481059 Delgado amp Stefancic 2017 p 76 Matsuda Mari J Lawrence Charles R 1993 Epilogue Burning Crosses and the R A V Case Words That Wound Critical Race Theory Assaultive Speech And The First Amendment 1st ed Westview Press pp 133 136 ISBN 978 0 429 50294 1 Delgado 1995 Kennedy 1990 Williams 1991 Curry 2009b p 1 Curry 2009b p 2 Curry 2011 p page needed Curry 2009b p page needed Delgado amp Stefancic 1998a p 467 Delgado amp Stefancic 2001 p 30 Bell 1976 Delgado amp Stefancic 1998a Bell 1980 Friedman Jonathan November 8 2021 Educational Gag Orders Legislative Restrictions on the Freedom to Read Learn and Teach Report New York PEN America Archived from the original on November 9 2021 Delgado amp Stefancic 2001 Delgado amp Stefancic 1998a p 467 Jackson Lauren Michele July 7 2021 The Void That Critical Race Theory Was Created to Fill The New Yorker Retrieved November 8 2021 Bell 1976 Bell 1980 Cobb Jelani September 13 2021 The Man Behind Critical Race Theory The New Yorker Retrieved November 14 2021 Wright amp Cobb 2021 Bell 1976 Bell 1980 Montgomery Bus Boycott Civil Rights Movement Archive Groves Harry E 1951 Separate but Equal The Doctrine of Plessy v Ferguson Phylon 12 1 66 72 doi 10 2307 272323 JSTOR 272323 Schauer Frederick 1997 Generality and Equality Law and Philosophy 16 3 279 97 doi 10 2307 3504874 JSTOR 3504874 Gotanda 1991 Bell 1970 Bell 1979a Crenshaw et al 1995 pp xix xx Buras Kristen L 2014 From Carter G Woodson to Critical Race Curriculum Studies In Dixson Adrienne D ed Researching Race in Education Policy Practice and Qualitative Research Charlotte N C Information Age Publishing pp 49 50 ISBN 978 1 6239 6678 2 When Bell departed from Harvard to lead the University of Oregon School of Law Harvard s law students of color demanded that another faculty member of color be hired to replace him Crenshaw et al 1995 p xx The liberal white Harvard administration responded to student protests demonstrations rallies and sit ins including a takeover of the Dean s office by asserting that there were no qualified black scholars who merited Harvard s interest Kennedy Randall L June 1989 Racial Critiques of Legal Academia Harvard Law Review 102 8 1745 1819 doi 10 2307 1341357 JSTOR 1341357 Cook et al 2021 c 14 36 Cook et al 2021 Gottesman Isaac 2016 Critical Race Theory and Legal Studies The Critical Turn in Education From Marxist Critique to Poststructuralist Feminism to Critical Theories of Race London Taylor amp Francis p 123 ISBN 978 1 3176 7095 7 Delgado amp Stefancic 2001 p 30 Freeman Alan David January 1 1978 Legitimizing Racial Discrimination through Antidiscrimination law A Critical Review of Supreme Court Doctrine Minnesota Law Review 62 73 Yosso 2005 p 71 Ladson Billings Gloria 2021 Critical Race Theory in Education A Scholar s Journey Teachers College Press ISBN 978 0 8077 6583 8 Kennedy 1990 Kennedy 1995 Cook Anthony E 1990 Beyond Critical Legal Studies The Reconstructive Theology of Dr Martin Luther King Jr Harvard Law Review 103 5 985 1044 doi 10 2307 1341453 JSTOR 1341453 Harris 1993 Warren James September 5 1993 Whiteness as Property Chicago Tribune Crenshaw et al 1995 p xiii Gillborn 2015 Crenshaw 1991 Curry 2008 pp 35 36 Ladson Billings 1998 pp 7 24 Ladson Billings amp Tate 1995 Donnor Jamel Ladson Billings Gloria 2017 Critical Race Theory and the Postracial Imaginary In Denzin Norman Lincoln Yvonna eds The SAGE handbook of qualitative research 5th ed Thousand Oaks California Sage Publications p 366 ISBN 978 1 4833 4980 0 Harris 2002 p 1216 Over twenty American law schools offer courses in Critical Race Theory or include Critical Race Theory as a central part of other courses Critical Race Theory is a formal course in a number of universities in the United States and in at least three foreign law schools Delgado amp Stefancic 2017 pp 7 8 Critical Race Theory Centre for Research in Race and Education University of Birmingham Retrieved June 25 2021 Quinn Karl November 6 2020 Are all white people racist Why Critical Race Theory has us rattled The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved June 26 2021 Cole Mike 2009 Critical Race Theory comes to the UK A Marxist response Ethnicities 9 2 246 269 doi 10 1177 1468796809103462 S2CID 144325161 Curry 2011 p 4 Gordon 1999 Borland Elizabeth Standpoint theory Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved November 22 2021 Macionis John J Gerber Linda M 2011 Sociology 7th Canadian ed Toronto Pearson Prentice Hall p 12 ISBN 978 0 13 800270 1 Harris 1994 pp 741 743 Crenshaw et al 1995 p xxiv To the emerging race crits rights discourse held a social and transformative value in the context of racial subordination that transcended the narrower question of whether reliance on rights alone could bring about any determinate results Harris 1994 p page needed Bell 1995 p 899 Mallon 2007 Hacking 2003 Delgado amp Stefancic 2017 p 102 Cabrera 2018 p 213 Farber amp Sherry 1997a Cabrera 2018 p 213 Hernandez Truyol Berta E Harris Angela P Valdes Francisco 2006 Beyond the First Decade A Forward Looking History of LatCrit Theory Community and Praxis Berkeley la Raza Law Journal SSRN 2666047 Farber Daniel A Sherry Suzanna May 1995 Is the Radical Critique of Merit Anti Semitic California Law Review 83 3 853 doi 10 2307 3480866 hdl 1803 6607 JSTOR 3480866 Therefore the authors suggest the radical critique of merit has the wholly unintended consequence of being anti Semitic and possibly racist Farber amp Sherry 1997a Delgado amp Stefancic 2017 pp 103 104 Ansell 2008 pp 345 346 Holmes 1997 Harris 2021 Locin amp Tackett 1993 Apple R W June 5 1993 THE GUINIER BATTLE President Blames Himself for Furor Over Nominee The New York Times Totenberg Nina July 5 2022 The Supreme Court is the most conservative in 90 years NPR Retrieved June 11 2023 Kruzel John May 4 2022 Conservative court strategy bears fruit as Roe faces peril The Hill Retrieved June 11 2023 Hurley Lawrence Chung Andrew Hurley Lawrence July 1 2022 Explainer How the conservative Supreme Court is reshaping U S law Reuters Retrieved June 11 2023 Rhodes Christopher The Federalist Society Architects of the American dystopia www aljazeera com Retrieved June 11 2023 Ansell 2008 p 346 Rosen 1996 Russell 1997 Note 67 p 791 Gillborn David 2014 Racism as Policy A Critical Race Analysis of Education Reforms in the United States and England The Educational Forum 78 1 30 31 doi 10 1080 00131725 2014 850982 S2CID 144670114 Winerip Michael March 19 2012 Racial Lens Used to Cull Curriculum in Arizona The New York Times Archived from the original on July 8 2017 Depenbrock Julie August 22 2017 Federal Judge Finds Racism Behind Arizona Law Banning Ethnic Studies All Things Considered NPR Archived from the original on July 6 2019 Carr 2022 Wilson 2021 Dawsey amp Stein 2020 Lang 2020 Waxman 2021 Education Week 2021 Gross 2022 Rubin Daniel Ian July 3 2020 Hebcrit a new dimension of critical race theory Social Identities 26 4 499 514 doi 10 1080 13504630 2020 1773778 S2CID 219923352 Yosso 2005 p 72 Delgado amp Stefancic 1998b Yosso 2005 p 72 Harpalani 2013 Castillo Wendy Gillborn David March 9 2022 How to QuantCrit Practices and Questions for Education Data Researchers and Users Gil De Lamadrid Daniel 2023 QueerCrit The Intersection of Queerness and the Black White Binary Academia Myslinska 2014a pp 559 660 Jupp Berry amp Lensmire 2016 Myslinska 2014b See e g Levin 2008 Annamma Connor amp Ferri 2012 Trevino Harris amp Wallace 2008 Yosso 2006 p 7 Yosso 2005 Delgado amp Stefancic 2001 p 6 Yosso 2006 Iftikar Jon S Museus Samuel D November 26 2018 On the utility of Asian critical AsianCrit theory in the field of education International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education 31 10 935 949 doi 10 1080 09518398 2018 1522008 S2CID 149949621 Brayboy Bryan McKinley Jones December 2005 Toward a Tribal Critical Race Theory in Education The Urban Review 37 5 425 446 doi 10 1007 s11256 005 0018 y S2CID 145515195 ReferencesAlcoff Linda 2021 Critical Philosophy of Race In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2021 ed Ansell Amy 2008 Critical Race Theory In Schaefer Richard T ed Encyclopedia of Race Ethnicity and Society Volume 1 SAGE Publications pp 344 346 doi 10 4135 9781412963879 n138 ISBN 978 1 4129 2694 2 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Annamma Subini Ancy Connor David Ferri Beth 2012 Dis ability critical race studies DisCrit theorizing at the intersections of race and dis ability Race Ethnicity and Education 16 1 1 31 doi 10 1080 13613324 2012 730511 S2CID 145739550 Bell Derrick A 1970 Race Racism and American Law 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2307 1228836 JSTOR 1228836 Dudziak Mary L September 1997 The Little Rock Crisis and Foreign Affairs Race Resistance and the Image of American Democracy Southern California Law Review 70 6 1641 1716 SSRN 45950 Dudziak Mary L 2000 Cold War civil rights race and the image of American democracy Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 01661 0 Map Where Critical Race Theory Is Under Attack Education Week June 11 2021 ISSN 0277 4232 Retrieved January 22 2022 Farber Daniel A Sherry Suzanna 1997a Beyond All Reason The Radical Assault on Truth in American Law Oxford University Press pp 5 9 11 58 118 119 127 ISBN 978 0 19 535543 7 Gates Henry Louis Jr 1996 Critical Race Theory and Freedom of Speech In Menand Louis ed The Future of Academic Freedom University of Chicago Press pp 119 159 ISBN 978 0 226 52004 9 Gillborn David 2015 Intersectionality Critical Race Theory and the Primacy of Racism Race Class Gender and Disability in Education Qualitative Inquiry 21 3 277 287 doi 10 1177 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December 2016 Second Wave White Teacher Identity Studies A Review of White Teacher Identity Literatures From 2004 Through 2014 Review of Educational Research 86 4 1151 1191 doi 10 3102 0034654316629798 S2CID 147354763 Kang Jerry Banaji Mahzarin R 2006 Fair Measures A Behavioral Realist Revision of Affirmative Action California Law Review 94 4 1063 1118 doi 10 15779 Z38370Q SSRN 873907 Kennedy Duncan September 1990 A Cultural Pluralist Case for Affirmative Action in Legal Academia Duke Law Journal 1990 4 705 757 doi 10 2307 1372722 JSTOR 1372722 Kennedy Duncan 1995 A Cultural Pluralist Case for Affirmative Action in Legal Academia In Crenshaw Kimberle Gotanda Neil Peller Gary Thomas Kendall eds Critical Race Theory The Key Writings that Formed the Movement New York The New Press ISBN 978 1 56584 271 7 Komlos John 2021 Covert Racism in Economics FinanzArchiv Public Finance Analysis pp 83 115 Retrieved May 29 2022 Ladson Billings Gloria January 1998 Just what is critical race theory and what s it doing in a nice field like education International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education 11 1 7 24 doi 10 1080 095183998236863 S2CID 53628887 Ladson Billings Gloria Tate William F IV 1995 Toward a Critical Race Theory of Education Teachers College Record 97 1 47 68 doi 10 1177 016146819509700104 S2CID 246702897 Lang Cady September 29 2020 President Trump Has Attacked Critical Race Theory Here s What to Know About the Intellectual Movement Time Archived from the original on January 16 2021 Leonardo Zeus 2013 The story of schooling critical race theory and the educational racial contract Discourse Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 34 4 599 610 doi 10 1080 01596306 2013 822624 S2CID 144840673 Reprinted in Gillborn D Gulson K N Leonardo Z eds 2016 The Edge of Race Critical examinations of education and race racism Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 18910 2 Levin Mark 2008 The Wajin s Whiteness Law and Race Privilege in Japan Hōritsu Jihō 80 2 80 91 SSRN 1551462 Locin Mitchell Tackett Michael June 4 1993 Clinton dumps nominee Chicago Tribune p 11 Archived from the original on November 26 2018 Mallon Ron January 2007 A Field Guide to Social Construction Philosophy Compass 2 1 93 108 doi 10 1111 j 1747 9991 2006 00051 x Matsuda Mari 1987 Looking to the Bottom Critical Legal Studies and Reparations Harvard Civil Rights Civil Liberties Law Review 22 2 323 hdl 10125 65944 McCristal Culp Jerome 1992 Diversity Multiculturalism And Affirmative Action Duke The Nas And Apartheid PDF DePaul Law Review 41 114 32 Meyer Theodoric Severns Maggie McGraw Meridith June 23 2021 The Tea Party to the 10th power Trumpworld bets big on critical race theory POLITICO Retrieved June 23 2021 Myslinska Dagmar 2014a Contemporary First Generation European Americans The Unbearable Whiteness of Being Tulane Law Review 88 3 559 625 SSRN 2222267 Myslinska Dagmar 2014b Racist Racism Complicating Whiteness Through the Privilege and Discrimination of Westerners in Japan UMKC Law Review 83 1 1 55 SSRN 2399984 Rosen Jeffrey December 9 1996 The Bloods and the Crits The New Republic Ruparelia Rakhi 2019 2016 The Invisibility of Whiteness in the White Feminist Imagination In Kirkland Ewan ed Shades of Whiteness Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 77 89 doi 10 1163 9781848883833 008 ISBN 978 1 84888 383 3 S2CID 201575540 Russell Margaret M 1997 Beyond Sellouts and Race Cards Black Attorneys and the Straitjacket of Legal Practice Michigan Law Review 95 4 766 794 doi 10 2307 1290046 JSTOR 1290046 Strickland Rennard 1997 The Genocidal Premise in Native American Law and Policy Exorcising Aboriginal Ghosts Journal of Gender Race and Justice 1 325 Trevino A Javier Harris Michelle A Wallace Derron March 2008 What s so critical about critical race theory Contemporary Justice Review 11 1 7 10 doi 10 1080 10282580701850330 S2CID 145399733 Waxman Olivia June 24 2021 Critical Race Theory Is Simply the Latest Bogeyman Inside the Fight Over What Kids Learn About America s History Time West Cornel 1995 Foreword In Crenshaw Kimberle Gotanda Neil Peller Gary eds Critical Race Theory The Key Writings that Formed the Movement The New Press pp xi xii ISBN 978 1 56584 271 7 Williams Patricia J 1991 The Alchemy of Race and Rights Diary of a Law Professor Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01470 1 Wilson Reid June 22 2021 GOP sees critical race theory battle as potent midterm weapon The Hill Retrieved June 17 2022 Wright Kai Cobb Jelani October 11 2021 The True Story of Critical Race Theory Podcast The United States of Anxiety WNYC Studios Retrieved November 14 2021 Yosso Tara J March 2005 Whose culture has capital A critical race theory discussion of community cultural wealth PDF Race Ethnicity and Education 8 1 69 91 doi 10 1080 1361332052000341006 S2CID 34658106 Yosso Tara J 2006 Critical Race Counterstories along the Chicana Chicano Educational Pipeline Teaching Learning Social Justice New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 95195 1 Further readingDelgado Richard ed 1995 Critical Race Theory The Cutting Edge Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 978 1 5663 9347 8 Dixson Adrienne D Rousseau Celia K eds 2006 Critical Race Theory in Education All God s Children Got a Song New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 95292 7 Epstein Kitty Kelly 2006 A Different View of Urban Schools Civil Rights Critical Race Theory and Unexplored Realities Peter Lang ISBN 978 0 8204 7879 1 Fortin Jacey November 8 2021 Critical Race Theory A Brief History The New York Times Gillborn David Dixson Adrienne D Ladson Billings Gloria Parker Laurence Rollock Nicola Warmington Paul eds 2018 Critical Race Theory in Education 1st ed Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 84827 6 Goldberg David Theo May 2 2021 The War on Critical Race Theory Boston Review Taylor Edward Spring 1998 A Primer on Critical Race Theory Who are the critical race theorists and what are they saying Journal of Blacks in Higher Education 19 122 124 doi 10 2307 2998940 JSTOR 2998940