Title: Beyond PostRacialism, Toward Opportunity and Social Justice
1Beyond Post-Racialism, Toward Opportunity and
Social Justice
Presentation at the MOSES 12th Annual Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. Banquet January 19, 2009
- john a. powell,
- Executive Director of the Kirwan Institute for
the Study of Race and Ethnicity, - and Williams Chair in Civil Rights Civil
Liberties, - Moritz College of Law
2Todays Conversation
- Reflecting on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
- Our current situation
- Difficulties faced by Detroit
- Recognizing the relevance of race
- Moving forward
- Opportunity, coalition building and targeted
universalism - Importance of community organizations like MOSES
3Dr. King and Barack Obama
- Let us rise up tonight with a greater
readiness. Let us stand with a greater
determination. And let us move on in these
powerful days, these days of challenge to make
America what it ought to be. We have an
opportunity to make America a better nation. - -Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
4Dr. King and Barack Obama
- This is our moment. This is our time, to put our
- people back to work and open doors of opportunity
- for our kids to restore prosperity and promote
the - cause of peace to reclaim the American Dream
- and reaffirm that fundamental truth, that, out of
- many, we are one that while we breathe, we hope.
- And where we are met with cynicism and doubts
- and those who tell us that we can't, we will
- respond with that timeless creed that sums up the
- spirit of a people Yes, we can.
- -Barack Obama
5Dr. King on Economic Justice
- Called for an economic bill of rights and a
massive jobs program and worked on the Poor
Peoples campaign - It must not be just black peopleWe must include
American Indians, Puerto Ricans, Mexicans, and
even poor whites. - In 1968, Dr. King supported a sanitation workers
strike in Memphis - Our only hope today lies in our ability to
recapture the revolutionary spirit and go out
into a sometimes hostile world declaring eternal
hostility to poverty, racism, and militarism.
6Poverty by the Numbers
- The official 2007 poverty rate was 12.5 percent
- 37.3 million people were in poverty, up from 36.5
million in 2006. - Poverty did not change for Whites (8.2 percent),
Blacks (24.5 percent), and Asians (10.2 percent)
from 2006, however they increased for Hispanics - The poverty rate increased to 18 for children
under 18 years old while it remained unchanged
for people 18-64 years old and people over 65 - Over 3 times as many families fall below family
budget thresholds as opposed to the poverty line
Source US Census Bureau
7The Impact of Concentrated Foreclosures
- Foreclosures pull wealth/equity and assets out of
the neighborhood - Widespread displacement of renters homeowners
tears disrupts the social fabric and creates
instability for school age children - Vacant property encourages crime, disinvestment
and public safety risks - These challenges eventually ensnare all residents
7
8Disproportionate Impact
- Surge in foreclosures
- Nearly 900,000 homes repossessed by banks in just
the last 12 months - Foreclosures rose 81 ensnaring 2.3 million U.S.
households during 2008 - A global crisis with racially disparate impacts
- Nearly half of all subprime loans went to African
American and Latino borrowers - even though many qualified for prime loans
- African American and Latino homeowners are
expected to lose between 164-213 billion in
assets due to the crisis
Sources United for a Fair Economy, Foreclosed
State of the Dream 2008 Detroit Free Press,
Foreclosures up by 81 in US.
http//www.freep.com/article/20090115/BUSINESS07/9
01150357/-1/rss07
9Detroit and Foreclosures
- According to RealtyTrac Inc, Wayne County fell to
10th place in 2008 foreclosure filings after
being 1st in the nation in 2007 - Filings fell by 7.7 from 2007
- The rest of metro Detroit (Oakland, Macomb, St.
Clair, Lapeer and Livingston counties) was up 42
from 2007. - Bank repossessions rose 19 in Michigan last year
and the state ranked 6th nationwide in the number
of foreclosure filings - Filings are up 107 from 2006
Source Detroit Free Press, Foreclosures up by
81 in US. http//www.freep.com/article/20090115/
BUSINESS07/901150357/-1/rss07
10The Undercapitalized City of Detroit
- Detroit (like other rust belt cities) is an
undercapitalized city with significant urban
decline and limited new investment. - Other large undercapitalized cities include
Cleveland, St. Louis, Pittsburg, Philadelphia,
Baltimore, Newark. - Undercapitalized cities are categorized
as being highly fragmented and having
great racial and social disparities
The Core Rust Belt Region
11Undercapitalized Cities
Hot Market Cities
Midrange
Austin
Cleveland
San Fran.
Detroit
Portland
Seattle
Indianapolis
Columbus
Raleigh
Chicago
12Regionalism in a Detroit Context An
equity-based regional agenda in a
undercapitalized city
- In contrast the only Midwestern regions with
relatively low levels of disparity are
Indianapolis and Columbus - Both regions have more regionalized government
structures (Indianapolis through consolidation,
Columbus through proactive annexation) - Research by David Rusk, David Miller and others
supports this theme, finding that less fragmented
regions as have more racial equity than their
fragmented peers - Researchers feel that fragmentation (and
corresponding exclusionary policies) produce
greater levels of segregation and greater
exclusion from opportunity for people of color,
ultimately leading to greater inequity
13Detroits Demographics Race
http//factfinder.census.gov
14Opportunity in Detroit
- Low opportunity communities are clustered in
inner city, high opportunity areas are found in
the suburbs - Based on an analysis of multiple indicators of
neighborhood opportunity (poverty rates, vacancy
rates, population change, unemployment rates,
home values and job change, etc.)
15Detroit Automakers and Race
- Detroit car companies employed blacks at a time
when other industries would not - The decent wages provided a route to the middle
class for blacks - As of December 2008, nearly 20,000
African-American auto workers had lost jobs, a
13.9 percent decline in employment, since the
recession began - African-Americans earn much higher wages in the
auto industry than in other parts of the economy,
and the loss of these solid, middle-class jobs
would be devastating
Source Economic Policy Institute
16Race and the Economic Situation
- White unemployment was at 6.6 percent in
December, but black unemployment was nearly 12
percent. - The unemployment rate for black men was 13.4
- According to report by the Economic Mobility
Project, African-American children were less
likely than their white children to earn more
than their parents did. - This is true even for middle class blacks
- 45 of African American children fell to the
bottom of the income scale as adults compared to
only 16 of whites
Source U.S. Intra-generational Economic Mobility
from 1984-2004 http//www.economicmobility.org/ass
ets/pdfs/PEW_EMP_MOBILITY_1984_TO_2004_KEY_FINDING
S.pdf New York Times, As Detroit Suffers, Black
Workers Hurt. http//www.nytimes.com/2008/12/30/b
usiness/30detroit.html?_r1partnerMOREOVERNEWSe
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17The Continuing Relevance of Race
- Why does race continue to play such a critical
role in determining societal outcomes? - Havent we entered a post-racial moment with the
election of Barack Obama? - While significant in many ways, Obamas victory
does not erase the persistent inequalities that
hinder the life chances for marginalized groups
18Myth of Post-racialism
- Conservative and liberal political commentators
termed Obama as a post-racial candidate much
different from Rev. Al Sharpton or Jesse Jackson - This was a color-blind election Deneen
Borelli, National Center for Public
Policy Research - Many others question the notion of past-racialism
and worry about Obamas desire to transcend a
critical black narrative about America - My fear is that, should Obama succeed with his
effort to renegotiate the implicit American
racial contract, then the prophetic African
American voice which is occasionally strident
and necessarily a dissident, outsider's voice
could be lost to us forever. Glenn Loury,
Brown Univ.
19Racial Disparities and Inequity
- Although racial attitudes are improving, racial
disparities persist on every level. - Inequity arises as disenfranchised groups are
left out of the democratic process.
www.cartoonstock.com
20Spatial Racism and Inequality
- The government plays a central role in the
arrangement of space and opportunities - These arrangements are not neutral or natural
or colorblind - Social and racial inequities are geographically
inscribed - There is a polarization between the rich and the
poor that is directly related to the areas in
which they live
21Mutual Institutional Interactions
22The Cumulative Effects of Racial and Opportunity
Segregation
- Zoning laws prevent affordable housing
development in many suburbs - Municipalities subsidize the relocation of
businesses out of the city - Transportation spending favors highways,
metropolitan expansion and urban sprawl - Court decisions prevent metropolitan school
desegregation - School funding is tied to property taxes
23The Cumulative Effects of Racial and Opportunity
Segregation
Segregation impacts a number of life-opportunities
Impacts on Health
School Segregation
Impacts on Educational Achievement
Exposure to crime arrest
Transportation limitations and other inequitable
public services
Job segregation
Neighborhood Segregation
Racial stigma, other psychological impacts
Impacts on community power and individual assets
Adapted from figure by Barbara Reskin at
http//faculty.washington.edu/reskin/
24Other Manifestations of Race
- Historically, the notion of religio-racism
- In 17th century, many Irish Catholics and native
Irish (Celtic tribes) lost a considerable amount
of landholdings due to an Act passed by the
English government - From 1652 onward, racial oppressionwas anchored
in the very bedrock of the Irish colonial
economy, (p. 51) - Irish Catholics, Anglo-Irish landlords, and
native Irish became a combined racialized
other
Source Allen, Theodore. The Invention of the
White Race Racial Oppression and Social Control.
London, UK Versa, 1994
25Misconceptions about Obamas Faith
- 46 of Americans unable to identify Obama as a
Christian - 3-in-10 say he is a Muslim or that they have
heard different things - 2-in-10 McCain supporters say that Obama is a
Muslim - Fewer than one-in-ten Obama supporters (7)
identify him as a Muslim - More than three times as many white as African
Americans voters think Obama is Muslim
26Distribution of Religious Centers in the
Metropolitan Detroit
Source Pluralism Project
27Moving Forward Effectively and Proactively
- How do we make sense of all of this?
- Understanding Opportunity
- Recognizing our interconnectedness
- Targeted Universalism as an approach
- Coalition building and the role of community
organizations like MOSES
28Opportunity is Mediated
- For much of human history, we interacted
exclusively on a face-to-face basis within small
communities - How we understand discrimination, prejudice, and
identity - Now, many of our relationships are mediated
- Technology
- Distance
- Institutions
- People in foreclosure cannot find a person to
talk to - And our opportunities are strengthened or
truncated by these mediating factors
29Opportunity is Global
- Our world today is more complex and
interconnected. Current and future changes will
not be only driven by local/national issues, but
influenced by systemic global trends and
challenges - Examples
- Globalization
- Climate change
- The credit and foreclosure crisis
- Growing diversity and widening inequality
- We must adjust our lens of analysis to reflect
these changing conditions - Moving towards a systems approach of problem
solving and identifying solutions
30Opportunity is Racialized
- Structural racialization the joint operation of
institutions produces racialized outcomes. - Structures unevenly distribute benefits, burdens,
and racialized meaning. - In 1960, African-American families in poverty
were 3.8 times more likely to be concentrated in
high-poverty neighborhoods than poor whites. - In 2000, they were 7.3 times more likely.
- This uneven distribution has negative
consequences not just for those with the greatest
need, but all of us.
31Emphasizing our Linked Fateand Interconnectedness
- All members of a society share a linked fate
- Inequality is a sign of an economically/socially
inefficient society, where proper investments are
not made in human capital, and where much of the
population can not meet its creative potential.
These disparities and inequities make our nation
less competitive, depressing opportunities for
all - should be collaborative and focus on coalition
building - recognize the interconnectedness of our being and
fate - re-conceptualize society to promote the
political, economic, spiritual, and psychological
health of all
32Targeted Universalism
- Through collective imagination, we need to define
what the future should look like - A New Paradigm! Targeted Universalism
- What is our alternative vision?
- A model where we all grow together
- A model where we embrace collective solutions
- This vision requires collective action and will
require coalitions to be successful
33Challenge False Universalism
- An example of Transactional thinking
- Uneven distribution of pathways to opportunity
- Universal programs do not account for the
differences in experience among Whites and people
of color - Examples Poverty-reduction programs, social
security - Inability to reach opportunity through these
universal programs is seen as an individual
failure
34Coalition Building
- Move from transactional level to a deeper
transformative level - Coalition across groups, space, ideology
- Ethics of connectedness and linked fate
- Structures, policies, institutions actively
disconnect us whereas they could proactively
connect us
35Coalition Building and Collaboration
- Action-linked intervention should focus on
multi-racial and multi-ethnic coalitions - Leadership and coalition building will be vital
to creating the political momentum for change - Regional actors must have an inclusive series of
conversations that foregrounds equity - The capacity to coordinate and move various
initiatives forward must be developed - Residents can help build public support for
policy reforms
36Importance of community organizations MOSES
- Community organizations play an essential role
especially with an administration that is likely
to be more receptive - MOSES is geared toward the community and its
mission is conducive to coalition-based
grass-roots activism - Faith serves as important anchor
- Broad engagement in a number of social issues
including employment, healthcare, immigration,
land banks, civil rights
37MOSES Initiatives and Greening
- Efforts to enrich and expand the mass transit
system in Southeastern Michigan - Pushing for wider availability of high quality,
healthy, and affordable foods - These initiatives are critical in terms of
community building and going green - Pressure on Detroit automakers provides an
opportunity for groups like MOSES to push for
new, more environmentally friendly car product
lines
38- Let us rise up tonight with a greater
readiness. Let us stand with a greater
determination. And let us move on in these
powerful days, these days of challenge to make
America what it ought to be. We have an
opportunity to make America a better nation. - -Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
39Questions or Comments? For More Information
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