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Talking about Diversity

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Title: Talking about Diversity


1
Talking about Diversity
  • john a. powell
  • Williams Chair in Civil Rights Civil Liberties,
    Moritz College of Law
  • Director, Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race
    and Ethnicity

Moritz College of Law Orientation August 13, 2009
2
Presentation Overview
  • What Is Diversity Important?
  • Colorblindness Versus Color-Consciousness
  • Implicit Bias
  • Logic and Benefits of Diversity
  • Challenges to Diversity
  • Individual Versus Democratic Merit
  • Moving Forward

3
Why Is Diversity Important?
4
What Is Diversity?
  • Diversity
  • versus
  • Multiculturalism
  • versus
  • Racial Justice
  • versus
  • Post Racialism
  • versus
  • Colorblind Racialization

5
Colorblindness
  • Regents of the University of California v. Bakke
    (1978)
  • The Court ruled 5-4 that race could be one of
    numerous factors used by admissions boards in
    order to have a holistic review of the applicants
  • Justice Powell believed quotas were an unfair
    advantage for minority applicants and found it
    unconstitutional because they discriminated
    against non-minority applicants

6
Colorblindness
  • In Bakke, the Court debated whether the
    Fourteenth Amendment was a colorblind principle.
  • The Court has struggled with this question ever
    since.
  • Is the Fourteenth Amendment an substantive
    equality principle or merely an
    anti-discrimination principle?

7
Regents v. Bakke
  • JUSTICE POWELL
  • Race-conscious measures must be precisely
    tailored to serve a compelling governmental
    interest
  • Rejects societal discrimination as a rationale
    because its too amorphous
  • Diversity can be a compelling interest
  • Using race as a plus-factor is okay, but quotas
    and set-asides arent

Source Dan Tokaji
8
Justice Marshalls Bakke Dissent
  • Had the Court been willing in 1896, in Plessy v.
    Ferguson, to hold that the Equal Protection
    Clause forbids differences in treatment based on
    race, we would not be faced with this dilemma in
    1978.
  • We must remember, however, that the principle
    that the "Constitution is colorblind" appeared
    only in the opinion of the lone dissenter. 163
    U.S. at 559. The majority of the Court rejected
    the principle of color blindness, and for the
    next 60 years, from Plessy to Brown v. Board of
    Education, ours was a Nation where, by law, an
    individual could be given "special" treatment
    based on the color of his skin.
  • It is because of a legacy of unequal treatment
    that we now must permit the institutions of this
    society to give consideration to race in making
    decisions about who will hold the positions of
    influence, affluence, and prestige in America.

9
Analyzing How We Talk About Race
  • False dichotomies as frames
  • 1) Black / White
  • A racial continuum has yet to be accepted by most
    people
  • 2) Civil Rights / Post-Racialism
  • Older Americans Civil Rights angle
  • Younger Americans a post-racial perspective
  • Whites tend to be absent from this discussion
  • 3) Race is not important / Race is important
  • Not important colorblind
  • Is important color-conscious

10
Colorblindness v. Color-Consciousness
  • Colorblindness
  • The logic Since we know race is socially
    constructed (not scientific), we should eliminate
    racial categories
  • This perspective assumes that the major race
    problem in our society is race itself, rather
    than racism.
  • Attempting to ignore race is not the same as
    creating equality

Is colorblindness an appropriate shift in how we
perceive race? NO. Colorblindness will not end
racism.
john a. powell. The Colorblind Multiracial
Dilemma Racial Categories Reconsidered. (1997)
11
Colorblindness v. Color-Consciousness
  • Color-Consciousness
  • This perspective acknowledges that race can be a
    divisive issue in our society
  • Policies and interventions need to address race
    otherwise they will only provide partial
    solutions to problems that are grounded in race
  • Acknowledging race through a multicultural frame
    can reduce prejudice
  • Color-consciousness fosters an appreciation of
    each groups contributions to society

Philip Mazzocco. The Dangers of Not Speaking
About Race. 2006
12
Implicit Bias
  • People have multiple networks that may be
    activated without our awareness
  • Depending on the situation, one network becomes
    dominant over the others
  • Even though we may fight them, implicit biases
    reside within us

13
Our Unconscious Networks
  • What colors are the following lines of text?

14
Our Unconscious Networks
  • What colors are the following lines of text?

15
Our Unconscious Networks
  • What colors are the following lines of text?

16
Our Unconscious Networks
  • What colors are the following lines of text?

17
Our Unconscious Networks
  • What colors are the following lines of text?

18
Implicit Bias The Shooter Game
  • In a video-game experiment, images of suspects -
    both armed and unarmed, black and white flash
    rapidly on a monitor. Within a split-second,
    subjects must decide whether to shoot.
  • Participants must assess whether the man in each
    picture is carrying a gun. Within 850
    milliseconds they must press one key to shoot or
    another to leave the figure unharmed.
  • After repeated experimentation, peoples
    mistakes, although rare, follow a pattern
  • They shoot more unarmed blacks than unarmed
    whites
  • They fail to shoot more whites than blacks are
    holding weapons.

19
What Would You Do?
20
Implicit Association Test
https//implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/
http//thesituationist.wordpress.com/2007/08/19/
21
Implicit Bias Unconscious Modeling
The Kanizsa Triangle
22
Priming
  • Our environment affects our unconscious networks
  • Priming activates mental associations
  • Telling someone a scary story activates a frame
    of fear
  • Claude Steeles stereotype threat
  • For example, tell students about to take a test
    that Asian students tend to do better than
    whites, and the whites will perform significantly
    worse than if they had not been primed to think
    of themselves as less capable than Asians.

http//www.eaop.ucla.edu/0405/Ed18520-Spring05/We
ek_6_May9_2005.pdf
23
Race-Neutrality?
  • Given the forces of implicit bias, framing, and
    priming, race neutrality is not a reasonable or
    effective goal
  • We need a new paradigm
  • Targeted policies alone are not desirable because
    they appear to show favoritism toward a certain
    group, thus stigmatizing them
  • Universal policies alone are not useful they
    fail to account for the fact that people are
    situated differently in the economic and social
    landscape of society
  • So Targeted Universalism

24
Targeted Universalism
  • Targeted universalism is an approach that
    supports the needs of the particular while
    reminding us that we are all part of the same
    social fabric
  • Universal, yet captures how people are
    differently situated
  • Targets those who are most marginalized
  • Targeted universalism is a common framework
    through which to pursue justice
  • A model which recognizes our linked fate
  • A model where we all grow together
  • A model where we embrace collective solutions

25
Targeted Universalism
  • Targeted Universalism recognizes racial
    disparities and the importance of eradicating
    them, while acknowledging their presence within a
    larger inequitable, institutional framework
  • Targeted interventions must recognize the
    interconnected nature of our structures
  • Attempts to address singular issues in isolated
    ways will ultimately fail

26
The Logic and Benefits of Diversity
27
The Logic of Diversity

Diversity of Identity, Beliefs, Experiences
Diverse Perspectives
Better Outcomes
Source Scott Page, A Logic of Diversity II
(available online)
28
The Logic of Diversity
  • According to Page, problem solving and prediction
    relies on two explanatory conceptsperspectives
    and heuristics
  • The more diverse the causal perspectives, the
    wider the range of potentially viable solutions
  • Heuristics are problem-solving tactics that tell
    problem-solvers working within a perspective how
    to search for potential improvements on solutions

29
Diversity or Ability A Test
  • Group 1 Best 20 individual problem-solvers
  • Group 2 Random 20 problem-solvers
  • Have each group work collectively when one
    person gets stuck, another group member tries to
    find a further improvement
  • Group stops when no one can find a better solution

30
Toolbox View
ABD
ABC
ACD
AEG
AHK
FD
BCD
ADE
BCD
BCD
EZ
IL
Alpha Group Diverse Group
31
Multidisciplinary View
Econ
Econ
Econ
Polisci
Math
Hist
Econ
Econ
Econ
Econ
Soc
Bio
Alpha Group Diverse Group
32
Logic of Diversity
  • Most of the time the diverse group outperforms
    the group of the most talented individuals by a
    substantial margin
  • Whether in a laboratory or a democracy, diversity
    benefits everyone

Source Lu Hong and Scott Page, Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences (2002)
33
Benefits of Diversity
  • Education for all students
  • More tolerant and inclusive viewpoints
  • Reduced intergroup prejudice
  • Improved intercultural competence
  • Enhanced critical thinking and integrative
    complexity
  • More creativity and intellectual confidence
  • Higher levels of parental involvement
  • More productive workplace relationships with
    other-race people
  • Less residential segregation

Source Brief of 553 Social Scientists, Parents
Involved
34
Benefits of Diversity
  • Education for non-White students
  • Modest positive achievement gains for Black and
    Latino students (no negative impact on test
    scores of White students)
  • Higher-quality resources (funding, class size,
    rigorous coursework, teachers)
  • More qualified teachers and less teacher turnover
  • Higher HS graduation rates
  • Richer social and professional networks
  • Higher income for African Americans

Source Brief of 553 Social Scientists, Parents
Involved
35
Benefits of Diversity
  • Daryl Smith et al. also found that institutional
    and structural diversity initiatives have
    numerous education and social benefits for all
    students
  • Access and success
  • Larger numbers of diverse people lend to fewer
    stereotypes perceived intuitional commitment to
    diversity
  • Campus climate and intergroup relations
  • Opportunities for interaction perceived
    institutional commitment to diversity equals more
    positive student climate views
  • Education and scholarship
  • Enhanced cognitive development more positive
    effect on attitudes toward racial issues
  • Institutional viability

Source Smith, Daryl and Natalie B. Schonfeld.
2000. The Benefits of Diversity What the
Research Tells Us. About Campus.
36
Challenges to Diversity
Individual Versus Democratic Merit
37
Challenges to Diversity
  • Diversity often comes under attack as an assault
    on merit
  • Merit is usually thought of in individualistic
    terms, meaning that achievements and accolades
    are considered the product of individual effort
  • Individual merit focuses on using these past
    achievements as predictors of future success

38
Merit
  • Limitations of individualistic merit
  • Reinforces myth of the American dream (hard
    work ? success) stigmatizes those who do not
    succeed
  • Marginalized groups do not benefit from a few
    members being given preferenceneed interventions
    that lift up group collectively

39
Merit
  • As Malcolm Gladwell in his book Outliers points
    out
  • People dont rise from nothing. We do owe
    something to parentage and patronage. The people
    who stand before kings may look like they did it
    all by themselves. But in fact they are
    invariably the beneficiaries of hidden
    advantages and extraordinary opportunities and
    cultural legacies that allow them to learn and
    work hard and make sense of the world in ways
    others cannot.

Source Gladwell, Malcolm. 2008. Outliers The
Story of Success
40
Merit
  • Knowing what successful individuals are like
    tells us nothing about their success
  • When and where we came from makes a difference
  • The cultures we belong to and legacies that were
    passed down to us shape our patterns of
    achievement
  • Extraordinary achievement is less about talent
    than it is about opportunity

Source Gladwell, Malcolm. 2008. Outliers The
Story of Success
41
Individual Versus Democratic Merit
  • Individual Merit
  • Focuses on past achievement
  • Relies on objective measures (GPA, ACT/SAT
    scores, etc.)
  • Fails to account for external constraints, such
    as structural racialization
  • Democratic Merit
  • Invests in democratic potential
  • Considers how students may contribute to society
  • Group-level focus

42
Individual Versus Democratic Merit
  • Merit, however, is often poorly conceived of and
    fails to allocate scarce educational
    opportunities in a manner that is consistent with
    democratic values
  • Our assumptions about merit hinge on decisions we
    have made about what the measuring stick should
    be
  • As Amartya Sen points out, merit is an incentive
    system used to reward those actions that society
    has reason to value

Source Guinier, Lani. 2003. Admissions Rituals
as Political Acts Guardians at the Gate of our
Democratic Ideals. Harvard Law Review. 113.
43
Democratic Merit
  • The U.S. Supreme Court has identified the
    objectives of public education as the
    inculcation of fundamental values necessary for
    the maintenance of a democratic political system
  • Preparing students for citizenship has been a
    stated goal of American education throughout
    history
  • Instill fundamental values and transmit knowledge
    necessary to partake in our democracy
  • In 2002, the Supreme Court in Grutter
    acknowledged the importance of preparing students
    for citizenship

44
Democratic Merit
  • Non-traditional measures of merit
  • Identify strivers
  • These students exceed expectations given the
    quality of their high school and their
    socioeconomic status
  • Strivers should be considered in light of their
    peers at the same or similar schools
  • They may perform better in college than their
    academic record indicates

45
Democratic Merit
  • Non-traditional measures of merit
  • Diversity capital
  • This refers to the unique interests, life
    experiences, and/or family backgrounds that
    students possess that enrich the academic
    atmosphere
  • Students who possess diversity capital create the
    opportunity to engage a variety of perspectives,
    thus creating a dynamic learning atmosphere

46
Democratic Merit
  • Non-traditional measures of merit
  • Create an assessment tool that measures
  • Academic preparation and potential
  • Cultural competence
  • Other competencies related to success in college
    and democratic participation
  • The assessment tool should be institution-specific
    , non-standardized, and free of bias

47
Democratic Merit
  • Aligning Missions and Admissions
  • Institutions should consider what they hope to
    accomplish in society and admit students who will
    help make those goals a reality
  • Institutions need to discern what they truly
    value
  • Strong test scores, or a strong democracy?
  • Extensive extracurricular activities, or
    investments in the wellbeing of a community?

48
Democratic Merit
  • At selective institutions of higher education,
    admissions decisions have a special political
    impact rationing access to societal influence
    and power, and training leaders for public office
    and public life. Those admitted as students then
    graduate to become citizens who shape business,
    education, the arts, and the law for the next
    generation. Admissions decisions affect the
    individuals who apply, the institutional
    environments that greet those who enroll, and the
    stability and legitimacy of our democracy.

Source Guinier, Lani. 2003. Admissions Rituals
as Political Acts Guardians at the Gate of our
Democratic Ideals. Harvard Law Review. 113.
49
Moving Forward
50
Moving Forward
  • A new conception of race needs to emerge
  • The conversation about race needs to move forward
    in different direction
  • There is a need for a racially literate
    conversation about the social purposes that
    universities fulfill.
  • Democratic merit
  • It invests in democratic potential
  • It shifts the focus away from a standardized
    test-based view of higher education admissions
  • It aligns well with the broader goals of education

Source Guinier, Lani. 2003. Admissions Rituals
as Political Acts Guardians at the Gate of our
Democratic Ideals. Harvard Law Review. 113.
51
Moving Forward
  • Universities need to do more about the
    achievement gap, the environmental gap that
    isolates Whites from students of color, and the
    teaching and learning gaps of professors
  • Coalitions need to be built between working-class
    and poor Whites who would benefit from
    acknowledging that they too are underrepresented
    on college campuses

52
Achieving Transformative Change
  • Transformative change in the racial paradigm in
    the U.S. requires substantive efforts in three
    areas
  • Acting Linking these understandings to the way
    that we act on race and how we arrange our
    institutions and policies
  • Talking Understanding how language and messages
    shape reality and the perception of reality
  • Thinking Understanding how framing and priming
    impact information processing in both the
    explicit and the implicit mind

53
Moving Forward
  • Whether in a laboratory or a democracy, diversity
    benefits everyone

54
www.KirwanInstitute.org
55
Links
  • http//americansforamericanvalues.org/
  • https//implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/
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