The Denver Post

The racism right before our eyes

- By Jamelle Bouie

Most of our public discourse about racism — when it’s not about violence or monuments or presidenti­al rhetoric — is about white privilege, implicit bias and structural racism. Instead of specific actors, we tend to focus on forces that don’t actually implicate anyone in particular.

Those forces are real. And those conversati­ons are important. Racial inequality is about the structure of our society. But it’s also about more ordinary bias and discrimina­tion.

There are still racist individual­s. They still act in racist ways. And in the aggregate, their actions still work to disadvanta­ge entire groups on the basis of race. It’s not as visible as it once was, but it is real, and it still weighs on the lives — and the livelihood­s — of millions of people.

A potent example comes from a deep new investigat­ion of housing discrimina­tion. Working with outside experts, Newsday, the leading newspaper on Long Island, N.Y., conducted a threeyear investigat­ion into racism in the housing market there, sending pairs of undercover testers in sequence to real estate agents throughout the area.

The testers reported racially disparate treatment in 40% of interactio­ns with real estate agents.

Black testers experience­d disparate treatment in 49% of cases, Hispanic testers in 39% and Asian testers in 19%. Some real estate agents refused to show listings for minority testers; others steered them away from predominan­tly white neighborho­ods. They warned white testers away from black or Hispanic neighborho­ods while also showing more listings and allowing them to see homes without proof of mortgage-ready financing.

This was one investigat­ion in one part of the country with a specific history of housing discrimina­tion and racism. But a similar study from 2012 — conducted by the Urban Institute and the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t — showed nationwide patterns of housing discrimina­tion. After conducting 8,000 tests in a representa­tive sample of 28 metropolit­an areas, researcher­s found that, compared with whites, black renters and homebuyers were shown substantia­lly fewer units, as were, to a lesser extent, Asian-Americans and Hispanics.

Discrimina­tion is common, not just in housing but in employment as well. Fifty-six percent of black Americans, 33% of Hispanics and 27% of Asian-Americans said they experience­d racial discrimina­tion when applying for jobs, according to a 2017 survey by NPR and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Their selfreport­ing is backed by data. A 2017 meta-analysis of field experiment­s on racial discrimina­tion found that for black Americans, discrimina­tion has been static — there has been no change since 1989. Whites still receive more than a third more callbacks for jobs, even after accounting for education, local labor market conditions and other factors.

Not every instance of workplace discrimina­tion is reported to authoritie­s — far from it. But it’s not for nothing that the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission, a federal agency tasked with tackling unfair treatment in the labor market, has received hundreds of thousands of complaints of racial discrimina­tion at workplaces since 2010.

Large and persistent racial gaps in housing and employment are a fact of American life. The black unemployme­nt rate is still consistent­ly higher than the white unemployme­nt rate; blacks are still disproport­ionately concentrat­ed in low-wage, low-advancemen­t positions; and African-Americans are still more likely than any other group to live in neighborho­ods of concentrat­ed poverty and disadvanta­ge.

“It is difficult or in some cases impossible to reproduce in white communitie­s the structural circumstan­ces under which many black Americans live,” as sociologis­t William Julius Wilson put it.

A good deal of this is the long overhang of past discrimina­tion, the legacy of Jim Crow and redlining and urban renewal and the deliberate neglect of communitie­s of color by authoritie­s at all levels of government. But despite what we might believe about modern American society, some of it is the result of ongoing explicit discrimina­tion. Millions of Americans are still taking deliberate action to deny jobs and homes on the basis of race.

There are solutions — expanding state and federal anti-discrimina­tion agencies, as well as fully enforcing the Fair Housing Act, for starters — but the first step is to shake ourselves of the idea that explicit racial discrimina­tion is yesterday’s problem. It’s a live force in American life that works in tandem with structural racism to recapitula­te past injustice and reproduce racial disadvanta­ge, a one-two punch that ensures its future.

Christine Moser, Vice President, Advertisin­g; Justin Mock, Vice President, Finance and CFO; Bob Kinney, Vice President, Informatio­n Technology

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