What’s Your Street Race? The Urgency of Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality as Lenses for Revising the U.S. Office of Management and Budget Guidelines, Census and Administrative Data in Latinx Communities and Beyond
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“Demographic and statistical research tend to confound race with ethnicity, although recent theoretical understandings of the racialization of identity tend to distinguish race and ethnicity when physical characteristics, especially skin color are a principal factor in identity formation”.
“Despite the problematic nature of racial categorization, it should be apparent that there is a crucial and non-reducible visual dimension to the definition and understanding of racial categories”.
An Invitation to Lifelong Critical Reflexivity on your Relational Positionality in Grids of Power
“Relationships defined at least in part by race, class, gender, culture, sexual orientation, age, disability, or locale, implicate different axes of power. Each axis of power forms a context within which domination can occur. Social actors thus are situated within multiple relational contexts, with possibilities for dominating and being dominated.”
“As [a woman] whose street race is white, but has a grandmother who immigrated [to the U.S.] from [Latin America], it made me think a lot about my own journey in understanding my relationship to race and ethnicity. It’s something that I’m beginning to grapple with and it has caused a fair amount of discomfort…as well as excitement. Do you have any book recommendation for someone who is just beginning this journey?”
2. Taking Stock: Theories, Ontologies and Epistemologies about Race Matter for Knowledge Production and Advancing Liberation
“founded and permanently structured to reproduce white supremacy…In other words, now that whites have created the state to be a sword, people of color cannot make it a plowshare”
“Laws produced racial power not simply through narrowing the scope of, say, of antidiscrimination remedies, nor through racially-biased decision-making, but instead through myriad legal rules, many of them having nothing to do with rules against discrimination, that continued to reproduce the structures and practices of racial discrimination.”
3. Ontological Contests: Why the Census Keeps “Confusing” Race and Ethnicity, but Lenses Anchored in Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality Could Fix the Problem
“White ignorance has been able to flourish all these years because a white epistemology of ignorance has safeguarded it against the dangers of an illuminating blackness or redness, protecting those who for ‘racial’ reasons have needed not to know. Only by starting to break these rules and meta-rules can we begin the long process that will lead to the eventual overcoming of this white darkness and the achievement of an enlightenment that is genuinely multiracial.”
“I urge a personal and political movement away from claiming to be ‘nonracist’ to becoming ‘antiracist.’ Being antiracist begins with understanding the institutionalized nature of racial matters and accepting that all actors in a racialized society are affected materially (receive benefits or disadvantages) and ideologically by the racial structure. This stand implies taking responsibility for your unwilling participation in these practices and beginning a new life committed to the goal of achieving real racial equality. The ride will be rough, but after your eyes have been opened, there is no point in standing still.”
“The theory of the Racial Contract, by separating whiteness as a phenotype/racial classification from Whiteness as a political economic system committed to white supremacy, opens a theoretical space for white repudiation of the Contract. One could then distinguish “being white” from being White.”
“And in fact, there have always been praiseworthy whites-anticolonialists, abolitionists, opponents of imperialism, civil rights activists, resisters of apartheid-who have recognized the existence of the immorality of Whiteness as a political system, challenged its legitimacy, and insofar as possible, refused the Contract (Inasmuch as mere skin color will automatically continue to privilege them, of course, this identification with the oppressed can usually only be partial).”
4. Insurgent Ontologies and Epistemologies and Other Inconvenient Truths: Centering Black and Brown Latinxs Embodied Relational Positionalities Vis-à-vis Oppression/Resistance for Liberation
“We caution that ‘Latino/Latina’ as a social construct must be problematized, that is complicated by differences in national origin, citizenship, race, class, and ethnicity and by the confluence of these factors. An intersectional approach acknowledges these differences and seeks to reveal and understand how they shape social experience ”
“To the extent that ‘race’ is assimilated to ‘ethnicity,’ white supremacy remains unmentioned, and the historic Racial Contract-prescribed connection between race and personhood is ignored, these discussions, in my opinion, fail to make the necessary drastic theoretical correction.”
5. Measuring Personal Identity Is Not Enough: On the Urgency of Adding Street Race for Practicing Solidarity and Advancing Liberation
If you were walking down the street what race do you think strangers would automatically assume you are based on what you look like? For the purpose of this question please mark only one box.
6. Conclusion: Imagining a Different Future with Rigorous Administrative Data for Racial Justice
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Demographic Questionnaire for Administrative Data Collection for Equity Use and Advancing Liberation
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López, N.; Hogan, H. What’s Your Street Race? The Urgency of Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality as Lenses for Revising the U.S. Office of Management and Budget Guidelines, Census and Administrative Data in Latinx Communities and Beyond. Genealogy 2021, 5, 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy5030075
López N, Hogan H. What’s Your Street Race? The Urgency of Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality as Lenses for Revising the U.S. Office of Management and Budget Guidelines, Census and Administrative Data in Latinx Communities and Beyond. Genealogy. 2021; 5(3):75. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy5030075
Chicago/Turabian StyleLópez, Nancy, and Howard Hogan. 2021. "What’s Your Street Race? The Urgency of Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality as Lenses for Revising the U.S. Office of Management and Budget Guidelines, Census and Administrative Data in Latinx Communities and Beyond" Genealogy 5, no. 3: 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy5030075
APA StyleLópez, N., & Hogan, H. (2021). What’s Your Street Race? The Urgency of Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality as Lenses for Revising the U.S. Office of Management and Budget Guidelines, Census and Administrative Data in Latinx Communities and Beyond. Genealogy, 5(3), 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy5030075