Ali Meghji

The Racialized Social System


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unit filled with stuff – theories, themes, practices and the like […] In the same way that Kendall Thomas reasoned that race was better thought of as a verb rather than a noun, I want to suggest that shifting the frame of CRT toward a dynamic rather than static reference would be a productive means by which we can link CRT’s past to the contemporary moment.

      In thinking of CRT as a verb rather than a noun, Crenshaw thus proposed we think of it as a practice, or methodology, for thinking about racism rather than as a theoretical framework per se. However, this did not mean that others in the CRT canon did not try to lay out some conceptual foundations of the CRT framework – and indeed, as we will see, scholars particularly in educational studies found these early attempts at making a CRT framework very fruitful for their analyses.

      It was perhaps in Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic’s two books Critical Race Theory: The Cutting Edge (2000[1995]) and Critical Race Theory: An Introduction (2001) that we see some of the early attempts to specify the key tenets of CRT in a way that still remains popular several decades later. While both Delgado and Stefancic were legal scholars firmly rooted in the ‘first wave’ of legally informed CRT scholarship, their tenets of CRT were – in theory – applicable well outside of the study of the legal system itself. These tenets were as follows.

      3. Race and races are products of social thought and relations. Here, we see CRT committing to a constructionist conception of race whereby ‘races’ are ‘not objective, inherent or fixed, they correspond to no biological or genetic reality; rather, races are categories that society invents, manipulates, or retires when convenient’ (Delgado and Stefancic 2000[1995]: 7). Of course, this constructionist approach resonates with the earlier CRT ethos of ‘uncovering how law was a constitutive element of race itself: in other words, how law constructed race’ (Crenshaw et al. 1995: xxv). Through this constructionist approach to the race and law, CRT was able to show how racialization was never an ‘even process’ but always a process that was itself embedded in power relations; from the definition of Black Americans as ‘property’ through the period of enslavement, through to legalization of the one-drop rule, and the legalized conversion of the Chinese from a nationality to a racial group in 1870 to justify the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1888.13

      The legislative history surrounding Title VII does not indicate that the goal of the statute was to create a new classification of ‘black women’ who would have greater standing than, for example, a black male. The prospect of the creation of new classes of protected minorities, governed only by the mathematical principles of permutation and combination, clearly raises the prospect of opening the hackneyed Pandora’s box.

      As seen in this example, critical race emphasis on intersectionality, therefore, stressed not merely that inequalities are additive (for example, a Black woman being marginalized in terms of being a woman, and in terms of being Black) but rather that different inequalities are constituted and expressed through each other. It is safe to say, therefore, that while CRT has the word ‘race’ in it, as it emerged in critical legal studies, it was not simply about the study of racism as a something that could be studied as a singular, isolated ‘thing’; hence why intersectionality features as one of its defining concepts.

      Critical Race Theory’s engagement with the discourse of civil rights reform stemmed directly from our lived experience as students and teachers in the nation’s law schools. We both saw and suffered the concrete consequences that followed from liberal legal thinkers’ failure to address the constrictive role that racial ideology plays in the composition and culture of American institutions, including American law school.

      What was so groundbreaking about Delgado and