Title: Reporting on Race
1Reporting on Race
- Andrew Grant-Thomas, Deputy Director
- Kirwan Institute for the
- Study of Race and Ethnicity
- Columbus Dispatch
- February 19, 2009
2OVERVIEW
- Race coverage in the Dispatch
- Reporting on race
- Race matters
- Race and Opportunity
- The Meanings of Race
- How race matters (mechanisms)
- Cumulative Systems Bias
- Implicit Bias
- Colorblindness
3I. The Dispatch Positives on Race Coverage
- The Dispatch included an assessment of the racial
impacts of the foreclosure crisis - Has run articles on challenges facing some of
Columbus's marginalized communities (and talked
openly about race in those articles) - Business section does good job covering issues
around race (housing, community investment) - Editorial page includes some columnists who talk
about race (Page, Herbert and others)
4The Dispatch Some Gaps in Coverage
- Too much school coverage criticizes teachers and
district administration little attention to
neighborhood factors and to racial and economic
segregation - Coverage of Ohio's economic crisis has not noted
its racial aspects - Discussion around fixing the state's economy
ignores the most marginalized segment of the work
force, people we must bring into the econ
mainstream if economy is to be revived
5The Dispatch The African American Community
- Although there is an emphasis on Black life, it
often deals with tragedy or athletics. - Why is it that when an alleged perp is black,
his picture appears all week long? White perps
only make one appearance, if any - More human interest stories that focus on the
positive contributions African-Americans are
making to the community. We readily get the crime
and sports stories, etc.
6The Dispatch Other Communities of Color
- There is not much on other minority groups, such
as Hispanics or Somalis unless it is dealing with
crime stories - I hardly ever see anything about the Somali
population, expect for the recent FBI
investigation - Feature more stories about educated people of
color who have something intelligent to say about
issues. Obama is not the only smart black (or
mixed race) guy out there
7The Dispatch Other Communities of Color
- Would be interesting to get more international
news with a 'Columbus connection' for example,
they did a good piece on the Mexican soccer team
coming to Columbus to play the USA - I would like the Dispatch to carry more pictures
of African Americans and other races/ethnicities
doing normal things - Talk with people of color (focus groups) to find
out what kind of issues/stories are current
within the city
8II. Reporting on Race Four Red Flag Tendencies
- Minimizing the significance of race and racism
- Focusing on individual attitudes and choices in
evaluating racial outcomes and remedies - Framing the concerns/aspirations of minority and
white communities as if they were unrelated - Highlighting race-as-problem without noting good
news or possible solutions
91. Minimizing significance of race and racism
- Possible responses
- Document racial disparities, but also explain how
those disparities came to be (and narrative
trumps numbers) - Pay attention to the racial benefits and
burdens of practices and policies. Who benefits?
Who is harmed? Who has power? Who is left out? - Do not reduce class and culture to race class
and culture matter, but race matters
independently - Note Some of the language in this section is
drawn from Annie E. Casey, Race Matters How to
Talk about Race and the Praxis Projects Race
Framing Memo.
102. Focusing on individual attitudes and choices
in evaluating racial outcomes and remedies
- Possible Responses
- Avoid the easy trap of telling individual,
episodic stories to advance the issue - Structural opportunity and personal
responsibility go hand in hand. Avoid the
suggestion that one or the other is to blame - Expose patterns and systems of injustice in ways
that help people understand the institutional and
structural roots of these issues
113. Framing the concerns/aspirations of minority
and white communities as if they were completely
unrelated
- Possible responses
- Note that many/most challenges are shared across
racial lines, though unequally (unemployment,
health care, foreclosure). Opportunity is at risk
for ALL of us - Focus on situations anyone might find himself in
(loss of a job, lack of health care) - Stress values that unite rather than divide
--opportunity, community instead of to each
his/her own
124. Highlighting race-as-problem without noting
good news or possible solutions
- Possible responses
- When discussing race-based inequality, focus on
desired outcomes, not just on present disparities - Focus coverage on policies, programs, and
practices the places opportunities are lodged - Where possible, highlight other communities where
similar issues have been addressed effectively - Celebrate evidence of progress even while noting
the distance still to travel
13IIIa. Race Matters Demographics and Diversity in
Columbus
Source Diversitydata.org
14Demographics Diversity in Columbus Household
Composition
15Diversity Inequality in Columbus Homeownership
and Overcrowding
16Diversity Inequality in Columbus Economic
Opportunity
17Diversity Inequality in Columbus Economic
Opportunity for Children
18Whoa!
19In general, Americans think much less well of
Blacks than of Whites
IIIb. Race Matters The Meanings of Race
20Race Matters The Meanings of Race
Except with respect to family, public opinion
doesnt treat Hispanics much better than Blacks
21Racial Identity ? Social Status
22Racial Identity ? Social Status
23IVa. How Race Matters Thinking Race, Thinking
Systems
24Housing Is a Key Intervention Point into the
Complex Web of Opportunity
Housing is a key component of a set of
interrelated opportunity structures that affect
the attainment of safe, stable housing and are
affected by housing
25Where Children Live Largely Determines Their
Access to High or Low-quality Schools
26Jobs Role Models
27Playgrounds, Parks, Artsand More
28 - All These Components Together
- Define an Opportunity Structure
29Race and Opportunity in Franklin County
Opportunity Indicators
- Property values
- Neighborhood poverty
- Vacancy rates
- Population change
- Projected job growth
- Crime rates
- Unemployment rates
- School math and reading proficiency rates
- School poverty rates
- School graduation rates
- Home ownership rates
30Latinos and, especially, African Americans, live
disproportionately in low-opportunity
neighborhoods
31Low-income African American Ohioans enjoy less
neighborhood opportunity than do low-income
members of other groups
32Low-income white families live in stronger
neighborhoods than hi-income black families
33IVb. How Race Matters Implicit (Hidden) Bias
34SPINNING GIRL
35- What colors are the following lines of text?
- Vqeb peow ytro
- Cvur zxyq brrm
- Vhrn wwte zytn
- Xoc jbni oew mne
- Zre ytu vee mkp
36- What colors are the following lines of text?
- Red
- Blue
- Black
- Green
- Brown
37- What colors are the following lines of text?
- Sky
- Grass
- Dirt
- Coal
- Stop sign
38- What colors are the following lines of text?
- Dirt
- Sunshine
- Sky
- Grass
- Stop sign
39- What colors are the following lines of text?
- Green
- Blue
- Brown
- Red
- Black
40Implicit Association Test
http//thesituationist.wordpress.com/2007/08/19/
41Implicit Bias against Nonwhites, Relative to
Whites, is Strong
Note Percentages represent the percent biased in
favor of group. Source 94 California Law
Review (2006), p. 957
42What Would You Do?
43Implicit Racial Bias The Shooter Game
- Images of suspects -- armed and unarmed, black
and white flash on a monitor. - Is the man in each picture carrying a gun?
Subjects have less than one second to press one
key to shoot or another not to shoot. - After repeated experimentation, peoples mistakes
follow a clear pattern - They shoot more unarmed blacks
- They fail to shoot more armed whites
44Implicit Racial Bias Demonstrated Behavioral
Links
- Split-second police decisions about when and what
to shoot regardless of explicit attitudes - Implicit biases affected sentencing decisions for
defendants convicted of felonies - More or less implicit bias corresponded with
comfort level and body language in interracial
interactions - People with greater implicit bias were more
likely to interpret ambiguous behavior with
respect to negative stereotypes - Source Dasgupta 2008
45Implicit Racial Bias Demonstrated Behavioral
Links
- As physicians' pro-white implicit bias increased,
so did their likelihood of giving white patients,
but not black patients, clot-busting thrombolytic
drugs - White people who exhibited greater implicit bias
toward black people reported a stronger tendency
to engage in such everyday discriminatory acts as
avoiding or excluding blacks socially, uttering
racial slurs and jokes, and insulting,
threatening or physically harming blacks. - The greater the implicit bias of an employer
against Arab-Muslim men, the less likely he or
she was to call an applicant with a name such as
Mohammed or Reza for an interview.
46Implicit Bias Not Just Race
- Gender
- Age
- Weight
- Skin-tone
- Religion
- Disability
- Sexuality
Source Nosek et al, Implicit Attitudes and
Stereotypes. Available at http//graphics8.nytime
s.com/packages/pdf/business/20061202money2.pdf
47Perceiving Race
- Racial categorization occurs automatically,
regardless of any efforts to divert attention
from race. - Within moments of perceiving someone, we
reflexively judge that person in terms of
in-group favoritism Is he or she us or them?
- We unconsciously think about race even when we do
not explicitly discuss it. Our implicit (hidden)
thoughts can overpower our explicit positions
48Reducing Implicit Bias
- Seeing targeted groups in favorable social
contexts can help undermine hidden bias e.g.,
seeing black faces with a church as a background
examples of admired blacks such as Colin Powell
and Denzel Washington reading about
Arab-Muslims positive contributions to society. - Working together in a structured environment to
solve shared problems - Teaching explicitly egalitarian views
- Practicing unbiased behaviors
- Learning to differentiate other-race faces
(facial recognition training) - Source Dasgupta 2008
49Reducing Implicit Bias (cont.)
- Feedback to make physicians more aware of their
own biases, disparities in behaviors toward their
own cohort of patients, privately administering
IATs to increase awareness, and targeted
education to mitigate effects on decision making.
- People who report a strong personal motivation to
be non-prejudiced tend to harbor less implicit
bias. - Developing simple but concrete plans to supplant
stereotypes in particular situations can also
short-circuit implicit biases. On researcher
found that those who simply resolved to think of
the word safe whenever they saw a black face
showed dramatic reductions in implicit racial
bias. - Source Siri Carpenter, Buried Prejudice The
Bigot in Your Brain.
50IVc. How Race Matters Colorblindness
- Ignores the continuing significance of race
- Reinforces notion that the societal playing field
has been leveled - Encourages ineffective policy solutions to social
problems - Discounts strategic benefits of diversity
- Is not feasible given pervasiveness and strength
of implicit racial thinking and bias - The problem is racial bias, not race ignoring
race actual undermines push for equal opportunity
51www.KirwanInstitute.org