Minority Issues Forum
December 15-16, 2008
Geneva
December 16, 2008
Afternoon Session
Statement by Brooks B. ROBINSON – BlackEconomics.org (NGO)
To Madame Chairperson Mohacsi and to Madame Independent Expert Gay McDougall, I
am Dr. Brooks Robinson speaking on behalf of the non-governmental organization
BlackEconomics.org of the United States. We would like to make five important points:
First, Forum members should be careful to not suggest courses of action that entrap
so-called “Minorities” in a “Catch 22” as described by Coate and Loury in their 1993
American Economic Reviewarticle, “Will Affirmative Action Policies Eliminate
Negative Stereotypes.” That is, so-called “Minorities” fail to qualify themselves
before the advent of “positive discrimination” because they believe that they will not
be allowed to fulfill certain positions or access certain benefits. On the other hand,
so-called “Minorities” fail to qualify themselves after the advent of “positive
discrimination” because they believe that they will be permitted to occupy certain
positions and to gain access to certain benefits—whether they are qualified or not.
In either case, so-called “Minorities” do not qualify themselves and their
performance is sub-par, which reinforces existing stereotypes.
Second, we request that the Forum’s Recommendations include a provision that the
United Nations and its members support (underwrite the cost of) research to identify
methods for inoculating so-called “Minorities” from the “stereotype threat” that
surfaces during academic assessments.
Third, we request that the Forum’s Recommendations acknowledge more
vigorously the positive benefits of segregated education under certain conditions;
i.e., the positive benefits of ethnocentric elementary and secondary schools and, at
the post secondary level, institutions, such as Historically Black Colleges and
Universities that are quite numerous in the United States.
Fourth, we extend the statements of Ms. Chin from CADRE and Mr. Parker from the
ACLU that were made during the Forum’s first day proceedings. While they
mentioned high incarceration rates among so-called “Minorities,” they failed to go
on to request that the Forum’s Recommendations extend the list of prospective
recipients of educational services to include incarcerated persons. Today, at least
in the United States, we find that incarcerated populations include large so-called
“Minority” populations. Often, these “Minorities” become incarcerated as a direct
result of the inadequate education that they receive, and they continue to recidivate
because they do not receive educational services while they are incarcerated.
Finally, we request that the Recommendations highlight the adverse effects of over
investment in organized (interscholastic) athletics by so-called “Minorities” on their
academic performance and on the overall reduction in well-being caused by that