Critical Race Theory: A Multicultural Disrupter
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Emergence of CRT
3. Theoretical Tenets of CRT
The critical race theory (CRT) movement is a collection of activists and scholars interested in studying and transforming the relationships among race, racism, and power. The movement considers many of the same issues that conventional civil rights and ethnic studies discourses take up but places them in a broader perspective that includes economics, history, context, group- and self-interest, and even feelings and the unconscious. Unlike traditional civil rights, which stresses incrementalism and step-by-step progress, critical race theory questions the very foundations of the liberal order, including equality theory, legal reasoning, enlightenment rationalism, and neutral principles of constitutional law.(p. 3)
- Critical race theory recognizes that racism is endemic to American (and Canadian) life; traditional interests and values are vessels of racial subordination.
- Critical race theory expresses skepticism toward dominant legal claims of neutrality, objectivity, color blindness, and meritocracy; the social construction of race presents an equal opportunity of race as an immutable characteristic devoid of social meaning and tells an ahistorical, abstracted story of racial inequality as a series of randomly occurring, intentional, and individualized acts.
- Critical race theory challenges ahistoricism and insists on a contextual and historical analysis of the law; racism has contributed to all contemporary manifestations of group advantage and disadvantage along racial lines, including differences in income, imprisonment, health, housing, education, political representation, and military service.
- Critical race theory insists on recognition of the experiential knowledge of people of color and their communities of origin in analyzing law and society; the lived experience of racism informs the critical reflection upon active political practice toward the elimination of racism.
- Critical race theory is interdisciplinary and eclectic; it borrows from several traditions, including liberalism, law and society, feminism, Marxism, post-structuralism, critical legal theory, pragmatism, and nationalism. Eclecticism allows CRT to incorporate aspects of a methodology or theory that effectively enables the narratives of marginalized people and advances the cause of racial justice while maintaining a critical posture.
- Critical race theory works toward the end of eliminating racial oppression as part of the broader goal of ending all forms of oppression; racial oppression is experienced by many in tandem with oppression on the grounds of gender, class, or sexual orientation.
Critical race theory (CRT) is a framework that can be used to theorize and examine the ways in which race and racism implicitly and explicitly impact on the social structures, practices, and discourses that affect people of color. Important to this critical framework is a challenge to the dominant ideology, which supports deficit notions about communities of color while assuming “neutrality” and “objectivity”. Utilizing the experiences of people of color, CRT in sociology also theorizes and examines that place where racism intersects with other forms of subordination such as sexism, classism, nativism, monolingualism, and heterosexism. CRT in sociology is conceived as a social justice project that attempts to link theory with practice, scholarship with teaching, and the academy with the community. CRT acknowledges that social institutions operate in contradictory ways, with their potential to oppress and marginalize coexisting with their potential to emancipate and empower. CRT in sociology is transdisciplinary and draws on many other schools of progressive scholarship.
4. CRT in Canada: A Long Overdue Call
5. From Land Theft to Land Back: History to Present
The realization of this settler fantasy of an “empire in extent of resources” required more than just the ideational reconceptualization of the land as resources or the production of knowledge of materials’ chemical composition, physical properties, industrial applications, and economic value. To govern the land as a territory replete with resources belonging to a settler nation requires a set of legal, political, and economic structures of control—structures that are themselves founded upon acts of dispossession and the extinguishment of existing claims to the land and existing forms of legal and political organization.(2014; Rasmussen and Lund 2018, McKittrick 2006, p. 99 as cited in Simpson 2019, p. 7)
Moreover, whereas Indigenous peoples of the Athabasca region believed Treaty 8 to be an agreement to protect their lands and livelihood, the state interpreted the agreement as the extinguishment of Indigenous nations’ claims to their territories, thereby lawfully permitting the cession of Indigenous lands to the Government of Canada… From the perspective of the prime minister and the settler state, treaties were a mechanism that could facilitate lawful dispossession, and thereby forward the project of securing resources, while also circumventing violent conflict by procuring the agreement of Indigenous peoples to “extinguish” their rights to the land peacefully.
Whiteness has unequivocally controlled and dominated the laws and boundaries of who was permitted to settle on dispossessed Indigenous territories, and this guaranteed an overwhelming majority of prosperous settlers of British and European stock.
6. Contemporary Iterations of Land Dispossession
7. CRT, Anti-Indigenous and Anti-Black Racism
8. CRT Backlash: A Distraction Marked by Denial and Ignorance
I’d like to make it explicit. The president and the white house—it’s within their authority and power to immediately issue an executive order to abolish critical race theory training from the federal government. And I call on the president to immediately issue this executive order—to stamp out this destructive, divisive, pseudoscientific ideology at its root (2 September 2020).
9. A Brief Note on Limitations
10. Conclusions: Making Sense of CRT in Canada’s Ever-Changing Multicultural Context
Without diminishing the significance that this traditional ceremony holds for Indigenous peoples, we complicate the state’s incorporation of Indigenous traditions into legal proceedings by reflecting on the manner in which ongoing settler colonialism interferes with Indigenous peoples’ ability to engage in land-based systems and structures such as ceremony.(p. 139)
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reece, R. Critical Race Theory: A Multicultural Disrupter. Genealogy 2024, 8, 103. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8030103
Reece R. Critical Race Theory: A Multicultural Disrupter. Genealogy. 2024; 8(3):103. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8030103
Chicago/Turabian StyleReece, Rai. 2024. "Critical Race Theory: A Multicultural Disrupter" Genealogy 8, no. 3: 103. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8030103
APA StyleReece, R. (2024). Critical Race Theory: A Multicultural Disrupter. Genealogy, 8(3), 103. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8030103