File: powell final for Darby
802
Created on: 3/15/2009 12:55:00 PM
Last Printed: 4/3/2009 10:11:00 AM
DENVER UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW [Vol. 86.Obama
and understanding.82 Though most of us are completely unaware of their
influence on our subconscious, these biases affect how we perceive, interpret, and understand others’ actions.83 Because these attitudes—
unrecognized on the conscious level but powerful at the subconscious
level—influence choices and decisions, individual and institutional discrimination can occur even in the absence of blatant prejudice, ill will, or
animus. This bias has been measured and documented in the Harvard
Implicit Association Tests.84 This does not mean that we are all secretly
racist. It does suggest, however, that we are complex and conflicted and
that this conflict can be organized to make either our biases more salient
or our equalitarian aspiration more salient. The Southern Strategy was
designed to mobilize racial resentment and worked well from 1968 until
the election of President Obama. We can challenge the nefarious effort
to make our biases more salient, but we cannot do so by being race blind.
As President Obama reminds us:
If an internalization of antidiscrimination norms over the past three
decades—not to mention basic decency—prevents most whites from
consciously acting on [negative racial] stereotypes in their daily interactions with persons of other races, it’s unrealistic to believe that
these stereotypes don't have some cumulative impact on the often
snap decisions of who’s hired and who's promoted, on who’s arrested
and who's prosecuted, on how you feel about the customer who just
walked into your store or about the demographics of your children’s
school.85
To address structural racialization, we must understand the work
that our institutions and policies are in fact doing, not what we want or
hope for them to do. In order to understand this, we must take seriously
our group situatedness. I have already argued that a universal approach
is likely to be ineffective. Others argue that targeted racial efforts are
likely to fail in part because of the continuing racial resentment that targeted efforts create and preserve. For a sincere policy maker this suggests a difficult choice. Either avoid race and leave much of the existing
racial practices and arrangements undisturbed, or deal with race and excite racial resentment that will undermine the policies and the electability
of the politician. But there are powerful and effective alternatives to
these two choices.
One alternative is to learn a great deal about how to talk about race
in ways that are not divisive. The second alternative is to make sure our
institutions do the work we want them to do. This is done by adopting
82. Project Implicit, supra note 81.
83. Because of these implicit biases, identical actions or opinions of two people of different
social groups often are interpreted differently, depending upon the group to which each belongs. See
also Jerry Kang, Trojan Horses of Race, 118 HARV. L. REV. 1489 (2005).
84. Project Implicit, supra note 81.
85. OBAMA, AUDACITY OF HOPE, supra note 16, at 139.