Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Critical race theory

- By Jacey Fortin

About a year ago, even as the United States was seized by protests against racism, many Americans had never heard the phrase “critical race theory.”

Now, suddenly, the term is everywhere. It makes national and internatio­nal headlines and is a target for talking heads. Culture wars over critical race theory have turned school boards into battlegrou­nds, and in higher education, the term has been tangled up in tenure battles. Dozens of U.S. senators have branded it “activist indoctrina­tion.”

But CRT, as it is often abbreviate­d, is not new. It’s a graduatele­vel academic framework that encompasse­s decades of scholarshi­p, which makes it difficult to find a satisfying answer to the basic question:

What, exactly, is critical race theory?

First things first…

The person widely credited with coining the term is Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw, a law professor at the UCLA School of Law and Columbia Law School.

Asked for a definition, she first raised a question of her own: Why is this coming up now?

“It’s only prompted interest now that the conservati­ve right wing has claimed it as a subversive set of ideas,” she said, adding that news outlets, including The New York Times, were covering critical race theory because it has been “made the problem by a well-resourced, highly mobilized coalition of forces.”

Some of those critics seem to cast racism as a personal characteri­stic first and foremost and to frame discussion­s about racism as shaming, accusatory or divisive.

But critical race theorists say they are mainly concerned with institutio­ns and systems.

“The problem is not bad people,” said Mari Matsuda, a law professor at the University of Hawaii who was an early developer of critical race theory. “The problem is a system that reproduces bad outcomes. It is both humane and inclusive to say, ‘ We have done things that have hurt all of us, and we need to find a way out.’”

OK, so what is it? Critical race theorists reject the philosophy of “colorblind­ness.” They acknowledg­e the stark racial disparitie­s that have persisted in the United States despite decades of civil rights reforms, and they raise structural questions about how racist hierarchie­s are enforced, even among people with good intentions.

Proponents tend to understand race as a creation of society, not a biological reality. And many say it is important to elevate the voices and stories of people who experience racism.

But critical race theory is not a single worldview; the people who study it may disagree on some of the finer points. As Crenshaw put it, CRT is more a verb than a noun.

“It is a way of seeing, attending to, accounting for, tracing and analyzing the ways that race is produced,” she said, “the ways that racial inequality is facilitate­d, and the ways that our history has created these inequaliti­es that now can be almost effortless­ly reproduced unless we attend to the existence of these inequaliti­es.”

Why is this coming up now? Last year, after protests over the police killing of George Floyd prompted new conversati­ons about structural racism in the United States, President Donald Trump issued a memo to federal agencies that warned against critical race theory, labeling it as “divisive,” followed by an executive order barring any training that suggested the United States was fundamenta­lly racist.

His focus on CRT seemed to have originated with an interview he saw on Fox News, when Christophe­r Rufo, a conservati­ve scholar now at the Manhattan Institute, told Tucker Carlson about the “cult indoctrina­tion” of critical race theory.

Use of the term skyrockete­d from there, although it is often used to describe a range of activities that don’t really fit the academic definition, like acknowledg­ing historical racism in school lessons or attending diversity trainings at work.

The Biden administra­tion rescinded Trump’s order, but by then it had already been made into a wedge issue. Republican­dominated state legislatur­es have tried to implement similar bans with support from conservati­ve groups, many of whom have chosen public schools as a battlegrou­nd.

“The woke class wants to teach kids to hate each other, rather than teaching them how to read,” Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida said to the state’s board of education in June, shortly before it moved to ban critical race theory. He has also called critical race theory “state-sanctioned racism.”

According to Crenshaw, opponents of CRT iInsist that acknowledg­ing racism is itself racist.

“The rhetoric allows for racial equity laws, demands and movements to be framed as aggression and discrimina­tion against white people,” she said.

That, she added, is at odds with what critical race theorists have been saying for four decades.

What happened four decades ago?

In 1980, Derrick Bell left Harvard Law School.

Bell, a pioneering legal scholar who died in 2011, is often described as the godfather of critical race theory.

“He broke open the possibilit­y of bringing Black consciousn­ess to the premiere intellectu­al battlefiel­ds of our profession,” Matsuda said.

His work explored (among other things) what it would mean to understand racism as a permanent feature of American life, and whether it was easier to pass civil rights legislatio­n in the United States because those laws ultimately served the interests of white people.

After Bell left Harvard Law, a group of students there began protesting the faculty’s lack of diversity. In 1983, The Times reported, the school had 60 tenured law professors. All but one were men, and only one was Black.

The demonstrat­ors, including Crenshaw and Matsuda, who were then graduate students at Harvard, also chafed at the limitation­s of their curriculum in critical legal studies, a discipline that questioned the neutrality of the American legal system, and sought to expand it to explore how laws sustained racial hierarchie­s.

“It was our job to rethink what these institutio­ns were teaching us,” Crenshaw said, “and to assist those institutio­ns in transformi­ng them into truly egalitaria­n spaces.”

The students saw that stark racial inequality had persisted despite the civil rights legislatio­n of the 1950s and ‘60s. They sought, and then developed, new tools and principles to understand why. A workshop that Crenshaw organized in 1989 helped to establish these ideas as part of a new academic framework called critical race theory.

What is critical race theory used for today?

OiYan Poon, an associate professor with Colorado State University who studies race, education and intersecti­onality, said that opponents of critical race theory should try to learn about it from the original sources.

“If they did,” she said, “they would recognize that the founders of CRT critiqued liberal ideologies, and that they called on research scholars to seek out and understand the roots of why racial disparitie­s are so persistent, and to systemical­ly dismantle racism.”

To that end, branches of CRT have evolved that focus on the particular experience­s of Indigenous, Latino, Asian American, and Black people and communitie­s. In her own work, Poon has used CRT to analyze Asian Americans’ opinions about affirmativ­e action.

That expansiven­ess “signifies the potency and strength of critical race theory as a living theory — one that constantly evolves,” said María C. Ledesma, a professor of educationa­l leadership at San Jose State University who has used critical race theory in her analyses of campus climate, pedagogy and the experience­s of first-generation college students. “People are drawn to it because it resonates with them.”

Some scholars of critical race theory see the framework as a way to help the United States live up to its own ideals, or as a model for thinking about the big, daunting problems that affect everyone on this planet.

“I see it like global warming,” Matsuda said. “We have a serious problem that requires big, structural changes; otherwise, we are dooming future generation­s to catastroph­e. Our inability to think structural­ly, with a sense of mutual care, is dooming us — whether the problem is racism, or climate disaster, or world peace.”

 ?? Maura Losch/ Post-Gazette ??
Maura Losch/ Post-Gazette
 ?? AFP via Getty Images ?? People hold up signs during a rally in June at the Loudoun County Government center in Leesburg, Va., protesting against critical race theory (CRT) being taught in schools.
AFP via Getty Images People hold up signs during a rally in June at the Loudoun County Government center in Leesburg, Va., protesting against critical race theory (CRT) being taught in schools.

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