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The Racial Glass Ceiling: Subordination in American Law and Culture

Online ISBN:
9780300227611
Print ISBN:
9780300223309
Publisher:
Yale University Press
Book

The Racial Glass Ceiling: Subordination in American Law and Culture

Roy L. Brooks
Roy L. Brooks
University of San Diego
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Published:
30 May 2017
Online ISBN:
9780300227611
Print ISBN:
9780300223309
Publisher:
Yale University Press

Abstract

Beyond the conventional sources of racial inequality—racism for liberals and a dysfunctional black culture for conservatives—lies a source of racial inequality little discussed or studied in our society. This book maps out that terrain, using the term “racial subordination” to define racial inequality that is a byproduct of individual or institutional action that consciously forgoes an opportunity to advance racial progress for the sake of pursuing a legitimate, nonracist competing interest. While not racism, this non-nefarious source of racial inequality is not racial innocence. Though the subordinator is not on the same hook as the racist, he or she is still on the hook—a different hook. Moving the debate over racial inequality from discrimination discourse to subordination discourse, this book demonstrates how the Supreme Court engages in “juridical subordination” and how the American mainstream culture, even with its commitment to cultural diversity, commits “cultural subordination” time after time. Racism remains a large problem in our society but eliminating it will not end racial inequality. Racism and racial inequality are not coterminous. Unless we also deal with racial subordination, blacks, or African Americans, will effectively face a racial glass ceiling. Breaking through that ceiling involves confronting complex and uncomfortable questions about what we value most as Americans.

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