Ali Meghji

The Racialized Social System


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      Such material statistics highlighted that despite the supposed legal guarantees of equality, the material justice which was called for during the civil rights movement was yet to be realized. Indeed, this material reality was connected to the additional retrenchment of the civil rights rhetoric at a discursive level. Crenshaw (1988) analyses this retrenchment through focusing on the rise of ‘new right’ neoliberalism and neoconservatism, which accelerated under Reagan’s administration in the 1980s. This neoconservative culture was constellated around the belief that ‘the goal of the civil rights movement – the extension of formal equality to all Americans regardless of color – has already been achieved’ (Crenshaw 1988: 1334). This new right vision – typified by thinkers such as Thomas Sowell – was held together by a contradictory view that the very existence of civil rights legislation was evidence that the US provided equal opportunities to everyone, and therefore that there was in fact no need for the continuing presence of such equal opportunities legislation. By a similar circular logic, such new right intellectuals and politicians argued that civil rights activists were demanding equal outcomes, rather than equal opportunities – and the duty of the state was only to offer the latter. Indeed, this neoconservatism was steeped in cultural racism in the way it argued that because Black Americans had equal opportunities but not equal outcomes, these unequal outcomes were the fault of Black people themselves for not taking advantage of their equal opportunities.

      We began to think of our project as uncovering how law was a constitutive element of race itself: in other words, how law constructed race […] Laws produced racial power not simply through narrowing the scope of, say, anti-discrimination remedies, nor through racially biased decision-making, but instead, through myriad legal rules […] that continued to reproduce the structures and practices of racial domination.

      This is not to say that CRT scholars thought that the use of the legal system to sustain racial domination was by any means a ‘new’ development in racial politics. In contrast, such legal scholars were aware that this was primarily an issue of continuity, whereby the US legal system, since its birth, has been founded on the rationalization of white domination over racialized others. This is well spelled out in Cheryl Harris’ (1993) ‘Whiteness as property’, where she shows how the US legal system constituted a network of racializing and racist forces: from the US Constitution defining the enslaved as ‘three-fifths of all other persons’, the one-drop laws dictating that the children of enslaved Black women – even when the father was white – were themselves Black and therefore owned by the slaver, the legal use of the enslaved ‘as a stand-in for actual currency’ (Harris 1993: 1720) in legal disputes, and the Homestead Acts which reallocated indigenous land to white Americans and failed to recognize indigenous property ownership, it is clear that the US legal system has been used to define and maintain the racial status quo.

      This critique of civil rights legislation actually facilitating further racial inequality is demonstrated in Derrick Bell’s scholarship.4 Take, for instance, Bell’s criticism of legal reform post-Brown v. Board of Education – the 1954 case which made it unconstitutional to segregate public schools by race. As Bell points out, the legacy of this case meant that US courts were much more concerned with questions of statistical, demographic desegregation (for instance, having schools that roughly represent the racial demographics of their district) rather than questions of actual educational quality which was accessible to Black students. This is important because in a context of civil rights legislation, many whites feared the integration of Black folks into their public institutions, and consequently took flight from their urban areas to create white enclaves.5 This meant that while educational segregation was de jure unconstitutional, it was de facto still very much the norm. Indeed, the US legal system was shaped so that such de facto segregation could not be understood as a form of discrimination; schools could only be accused of segregation if plaintiffs could prove that such segregation was itself the result of ‘discriminatory actions intentionally and invidiously conducted or organised by school officials’ (Bell 1995b: 24) – a criterion that was both equivocal and deliberately near-impossible to attain.

      It was in this context, therefore, that CRT scholars argued that Black people were ‘worse off in terms of legal theory’ in the post-civil rights era ‘than they were under the former “separate but equal” doctrine’.10 Indeed, the veracity of this argument can be demonstrated through raising some questions: if civil rights legislation was supposed to realize racial equality, how could the very same laws be used by whites to claim anti-white discrimination in university admissions?11 If the legal system was supposed to bring material racial equality, how come the primary beneficiaries of the resulting affirmative action have been white women?12 These questions seem to point us towards the CRT position that, despite the pretence of being race-neutral, the US legal system is in fact deeply articulated in racialized processes.