Critical race theory

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Source URL https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_race_theory
Title Critical race theory
Date published 2021-12-11
Curation date 2021-12-11
Curator Dr. Victoria A. Stuart, Ph.D.
Modified
Editorial practice Refer here  |  Date format: yyyy-mm-dd
Summary Critical race theory (CRT) is a cross-disciplinary intellectual movement that 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 was enacted, CRT scholars in the 1970s and 1980s began reworking and expanding critical legal studies' theories on class and economic structure and the law to interrogate the role of U.S. law in perpetuating racism.
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    Background

    Critical race theory (CRT) is a cross-disciplinary intellectual movement that 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 was enacted, CRT scholars in the 1970s and 1980s began reworking and expanding critical legal studies' theories on class and economic structure and the law to interrogate the role of U.S. law in perpetuating racism. They said that the liberal notion of value-neutral U.S. laws had a significant political role in maintaining a racially unjust social order, where formally color-blind laws continue to have racially discriminatory outcomes.

    Critical race theory  (CRT) is a framework of analysis grounded in critical theory which originated in the mid-1970s in the writings of several American legal scholars, including Derrick Bell, Alan David Freeman  [University at Buffalo Law School; obituary (1995)  |  local copy], Kimberlé Crenshaw,   Richard Delgado,   Cheryl Harris,   Charles R. Lawrence III  [local copy], Mari Matsuda, and Patricia J. Williams. One tenet of CRT is that racism and disparate racial outcomes are the result of complex, changing, and often subtle social and institutional dynamics, rather than explicit and intentional prejudices of individuals.

    Critical race theory  CRT draws from thinkers such as Antonio Gramsci,   Sojourner Truth,   Frederick Douglass, and W.E.B. DuBois, as well as the Black Power,   Chicano, and radical feminist movements from the 1960s and 1970s. Scholars of CRT view race as a social construct that is not "biologically grounded and natural." They state that the idea of "race" advances the interests of white people at the expense of people of color.

    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.

    Academic critics of CRT argue that it is based on storytelling instead of evidence and reason, rejects the concepts of truth and merit, and opposes liberalism. Since 2020, conservative U.S. lawmakers have sought to ban or restrict the instruction of CRT along with other anti‑racism education in primary schools and secondary schools. These lawmakers have been accused of misrepresenting the tenets and importance of CRT and of having the goal of broadly silencing discussions of racism, equality, social justice, and the history of race.


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    Additional Reading

  • [ProjectCensored.org, 2022-03-01] Conservative Lawmakers in Several States Push Sweeping Bans on Critical Race Theory in Classrooms.

  • [RightWingWatch.org, 2022-01-18] Family Research Council "Biblical Worldview" Fellow: Racial Diversity in Congregations Is Not a "Moral Good".

  • [Truthout.org, 2021-12-11] A Key Founder of Critical Race Theory Discusses the Right-Wing Panic Over It.

  • [Winston-Salem Chronicle; WSChronicle.com, 2021-12-08] Commentary: Critical race - to the bottom.

  • [BlackPast.org, 2021-08-04] Critical Race Theory: A Brief History.

  • [theAtlantic.com, 2021-07-09] There Is No Debate Over Critical Race Theory.  Pundits and politicians have created their own definition for the term, and then set about attacking it.  |  About the author: Ibram X. Kendi is a contributing writer at The Atlantic and the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities and the director of the Boston University Center for Antiracist Research. Ibram X. Kendi is the author of several books, including the National Book Award-winning Stamped From the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America, and How to Be an Antiracist.

  • [theAtlantic.com, 2021-07-08] Critical race theory is making both parties flip-flop.  The battle over teaching race in North Carolina schools prompts an ideological role reversal on both antidiscrimination and speech.

  • [NPR.org, 2021-06-20] Understanding The Republican Opposition To Critical Race TheoryNPR's  Lulu Garcia-Navarro and Barbara Sprunt  [local copy] break down the Republican led efforts in the U.S. to discourage educators from teaching critical race theory in grade-level schools.

  • Freeman, A.D. (1977) Legitimizing racial discrimination through antidiscrimination law: A critical review of Supreme Court doctrine. Minnesota Law Review. 62: 1049.  |  local copy


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