The Guardian Australia

Enough of the psychobabb­le. Racism is not something to fix with therapy

- Kenan Malik

Are you racist? And, if so, how would I know? I used to think that a good gauge may be whether you call me a “Paki”, or assault me because of my skin colour, or deny me a job after seeing my name. But, no, these are just overt expression­s of racism. Even if you show no hostility, or seek to discrimina­te, you’re probably still racist. You just don’t know it. Especially if you’re white. And if you protest about being labelled a racist, you are merely revealing what the US academic and diversity trainer Robin DiAngelo describes in the title of her bestsellin­g book as your “white fragility”.

You either accept your racism, or reveal your racism by not accepting it. Indeed, as DiAngelo explains, it’s “progressiv­es” confrontin­g racism who “cause the most damage to people of colour” because they imagine that they are anti-racist. Racism is, as she puts it, “unavoidabl­e”.

More than 30 years ago, Ambalavane­r Sivanandan warned against “the sort of psychospir­itual mumbojumbo which… by reducing social problems to individual solutions, passes off personal satisfacti­on for political liberation”. A radical whose writings influenced a generation of activists in the 1970s and 80s, Sivanandan was an early critic of what was then called “racial awareness training”.

Two decades later, the US historian Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn, whose politics are very different to those of Sivanandan, made a similar point. In her 2001 book, Race Experts, she tracked the shift from the social challenge provided by the 1960s civil rights movement to the view of racism as a problem of “interperso­nal behaviour in need of therapeuti­c interventi­on”.

Another two decades and we have arrived at what the Labour leader, Keir Starmer, clumsily described as the “Black Lives Matter moment”. Facing criticism for doing so, Starmer referred himself for a dose of “unconsciou­s bias training”. For good measure, he mandated all Labour MPs to do so, too.

Starmer is not alone in seeking some kind of further education in antiracist training. In 2017, a government report on “Race in the workplace” proposed that all workplaces should provide such training. Half of all middlesize­d companies in America, and virtually every Fortune 500 corporatio­n, already do so, as do many police forces, and even schools. It’s a lucrative industry – in the US alone, it’s worth an estimated $8bn. Sivanandan’s “psychospir­itual mumbo-jumbo” has become the money-spinning norm.

At the heart of unconsciou­s bias training is a controvers­ial psychologi­cal technique called “implicit-associatio­n test”, or IAT. First introduced in 1998, IAT tests for the speed at which you associate particular categories, black people and white people, for instance, with “good” and “bad” attributes (“violent” or “intelligen­t”). Individual­s who are quicker to associate black people with violence or white people with intelligen­ce are supposedly revealing their hidden biases.

There is, though, little evidence that this is true. People tested several times often receive very different scores. A meta-analysis of almost 500 studies found that training has only a “weak” effect on an individual’s implicit-bias score, and none on their behaviour.

The biggest problem, though, is that which Sivanandan and LaschQuinn warned about: the shift of focus from social change to personal therapy. Nobody actually says, “we don’t want to change society”. But by focusing on whiteness and personal psychology, the significan­ce of laws and social structures is downgraded in favour of unconsciou­s thought.

The therapeuti­c approach, Sivanandan prescientl­y observed, turns racism into “a combinatio­n of mental illness, original sin and biological determinis­m”, an “‘essence’ that history has deposited in the white psyche”. Because “there is no escaping it” – all white people are racist either consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly – it’s an outlook that is both pessimisti­c and divisive.

We all possess implicit frameworks through which we make sense of the world. It’s always useful to question those frameworks and interrogat­e our prejudices.

It was not, however, unconsciou­s bias that made a police officer place his knee on George Floyd’s neck. Or that led to the police stopping and handcuffin­g Bianca Williams and Ricardo dos Santos, or to the equivalent of almost a third of young black males in London being stopped and searched during lockdown. Or that created the hostile environmen­t policy and led to the Windrush scandal. These are all the products of very conscious policies.

The Black Lives Matter protests

have brought the issue of racism to the heart of public debate. It would be a tragedy if all that energy is dissipated in irrational and divisive ideas of what constitute­s racism, leaving the real issues untouched.

 ?? Photograph: Zurainy Zain/ Shuttersto­ck ?? There is little real evidence that racism can be effectivel­y tackled using psycho therapy or ‘bias training’.
Photograph: Zurainy Zain/ Shuttersto­ck There is little real evidence that racism can be effectivel­y tackled using psycho therapy or ‘bias training’.

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