Title: Structural Racism and Social Change: New Orleans and Beyond
1Structural Racism and Social Change New
Orleans and Beyond
- john a. powell
- Williams Chair in Civil Rights Civil Liberties,
Moritz College of Law. Director, Kirwan Institute - March 12, 2007
2AGENDA
- Structural Racism (SR)
- SR Implications Katrina
- SR Implications Beyond
- Concluding Thoughts
- Additional Information on SR, Rebuilding New
Orleans, and beyond
3Structural Racism
- Racism, and the factors producing and sustaining
it, have been theorized in many different ways.
Primary among these are - Individual
- Institutional
- Color-blindness
- The inadequacy of these models for describing and
understanding the complexity of racialized
operations of power has continually resulted in
failed diagnoses and responses.
4Structural Racism
- INDIVIDUAL
- This perspective suggests that the individual
subject acts independently and consciously of
his/her own volition to perform a racist action
(a.k.a. discretionary). - Problems
- Suggests that racism must always be rooted in
intention, - Often figures the subject as acting irrationally,
that is out of synch with the majority cultures
understanding of race and racism. - Often by framing race as a historical and extinct
phenomenon which obfuscates its contemporary
materiality, ideology, and structure.
5Structural Racism
- INSTITUTIONAL
- Institutions are organizations, or mechanisms of
culture, governing the behavior of social
subjects. Institutions are identified with a
social purpose and permanence, transcending
individual human lives and intentions, and with
the making and enforcing of rules governing human
behavior. - An institutional racism framework suggests that
despite the individual intentions of actors,
social institutions (including education,
religion, kinship structures, punitive systems,
and economic forms) produce outcomes that are
specifically racialized. - Benefits Recognizes that a subject acts not only
as an individual, but as a socialized person in a
racialized culture. Accordingly, attention can be
given not only to overt acts of individual
racism, but also the covert racialized operations
of institutions which are so normalized, they
often seem undetectable. - Problems Cannot account for the ways is which
neutral institutions work in conjunction with
other institutions to produce racialized
outcomes.
6Structural Racism
- Color-blindness
- Devised as a response to racism, a
color-blindness perspective suggests that race
should not be a consideration in interpersonal,
representational, economic, or legal. - Color-blindness, as a philosophy, is deeply
rooted in the liberal tenet of the universal
subject and is therefore often understood as the
epitome of just and neutral policy. - It has taken on a particular resonance is the
post- Civil Rights Era in which de jure
discrimination was eliminated to argue against
programs such as affirmative action. - Problems fails to account for the ways in which
neutral policies (de jure) are mapped onto a
historical legacy of racial discrimination
creating de facto disparity which often operates
far more covertly.
7A Structural Racism model attempts to account for
the theoretical shortcomings of traditional
models
SOURCE Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo (1997)
8Structural Racism
- How do we understand racial disparities if they
are not explained by personal discrimination or
explicit laws and policies?
- Structures are sets of mutually sustaining
schemas or relationships and resources that
empower and constrain social action and that tend
to be reproduced by that social action. (Sewell) - Structural racism is an analytical approach which
examines the interrelationship among institutions
as well as individuals for generating an
understanding of the (re)production of unequal
and hierarchical racial outcomes. An
analytical-practical by-product of this approach
is a call for institutional alignments through
strategic interventions and an emphasis on
analytical-practical monitoring because of the
dynamic reality of what is at stake. - To reiterate, structural racism is both a model
for understanding the reality of how racism
functions and way to refigure necessary
intervention.
9Structural Racism
- Shifting attention away from individuals, SR
focuses on the way in which outcomes are
racialized. When outcomes such as student
achievement, wealth accumulation, health factors,
etc. are disparate along racial lines, it is
evidence that singular institutions and the
interactivity between institutions are
functioning in a racist mode, regardless of
intent. Often, racism is not even perceivable
within a singular institution, but rather
operates across multiple domains to distribute
disadvantage. De facto disadvantage is often
produced even when there are no laws that are
specifically racialized. De facto disadvantage
then often results from the historical legacy of
discrimination, making racism a very dynamic and
potent force in the present. Racialized outcomes,
interactivity between institutions, and
historical legacies of discrimination, all
represent covert operations, making the
structural racism more difficult to diagnose.
Structural inequalities limit the democratic
process.
10Structural Racism
- Considerations for an SR Response
- In order to respond to the network of power
shaping structural racism, the interconnecting
relational web within which individuals live and
act must be investigated and articulated. - Within this network characterized by the
fragmentation of power, multiple levels of
leadership that cut across fields and borders
must be identified and mobilized. - This indicates a need to consider the larger
relationship between opportunity structures and
institutional inequities. - Including people where they once were excluded is
a step in the right direction, but it is not
enough. We need to examine the policies and
politics which led to their exclusion in the
first place.
11Structural Racism
- An SR approach assumes public policies,
institutional practices, cultural
representations, and other norms work in various
and interactive ways reinforcing and perpetuating
racial group hierarchical inequalities. - An SR analysis has a two-fold emphasis,
understanding and intervention, and FIVE
defining characteristics - Interrelated functioning of institutions
- Call for a strategic and dynamic understanding of
these interactive cumulative relationships
(single to complex) - A shift of focus from individuals to raced groups
- Strategic interventions that challenge the
collective routine actions of individuals
interacting within a set of normal institutional
arrangements. - Relevance of monitoring.
12Structural Racism
- Necessity/Importance of an SR approach
- An SR approach importance and necessity derives
from its broadening and grounding of individual
and institutionally-based explanations without
disregarding them. It brings us closer to an
understanding of reality because of its
theoretical generality and methodological
inclusiveness which cannot be stated for solely
individual and institutionally-based explanations.
13Structural Racism
- Necessity/Importance of an SR approach
- It forces us to look at results, not necessarily
intentions. Intentions need to be considered in
a relational way. - Policies neutral on their face and intent, can be
discriminatory in their effect. - Institutional and public arrangements are not
neutral in their impact and influence our private
choice and resources. - Laws and institutions need not be explicitly
racist in order to disempower communities of
color they need only to perpetuate unequal
historic conditions. - People usually make reasonable choices given
their constraints and opportunities, but these
constraints and opportunities are unevenly
distributed racially. - We need to consider these constraints in order to
understand the limitations placed on those
choices.
14Structural Racism
- Necessity/Importance of an SR approach
- Current disparities are symptoms of structural
racism. - Nevertheless, it is only analytically possible to
underscore SR when isolated from individual and
institutional racism this is not because SR is
only present when the other two are absent, but
because in their absence we are required to
sharpen our analytical skills in order to
understand racial disparities. - Simply recognizing disparities is not enough, we
need to examine our assumptions surrounding them.
- Inequality is built into our current
institutional arrangements. - Disparities are not a sign that the current
system isnt working, they are a sign that it is
working exactly as it is supposed to because it
eschews any consideration of interrelated
institutional effects, in general and group-wise.
15Structural Racism
- Necessity/Importance of an SR approach
- An SR approach proposes evaluating the fairness
of structures or institutional arrangements by
how they function in themselves and their
relationship with other structures and
institutions in society and human agency.
16SR Implications Katrina
- The Challenge 1
- More than one year after Katrina, Gulf Coast
recovery still requires tremendous assistance and
progress has been slow. - Many issues continue to slow recovery (some
examples) - Funds not reaching communities in need
- Housing funds not reaching homeowners in need
- Long term federal commitment to Category 5 levee
system uncertain - Continued housing crisis in New Orleans
- Citys population much lower than what was
expected - Continued displacement for nearly ¼ million
residents
17SR Implications Katrina
- The Challenge 2
- Despite the great need in the Gulf for additional
assistance, concerns exist regarding the nations
focus on Gulf Coast recovery. - Public attention
- The public does not see progress in the Gulf
Coast recovery and feels significant funds have
been expended, but does not fully understand why
recovery has been slow. - Media attention
- After significant press coverage near the
anniversary, national news coverage of the Gulf
Coast has diminished significantly. - News cycle moving onward (mid-terms, political
scandals, international affairs).
18SR Implications Katrina
- The Challenge 3
- Why this disconnect and concern about public
support? - Media emphasis on waste in spending and size of
Katrina relief package (larger than any other
disaster response). - Common public beliefs
- Gulf Coast recovery should only cost 200
billion. - There is a popular perception that the 109
billion largely goes to the city of New Orleans. - There is a general assumption that much of those
dollars support longer-term recovery and
reconstruction - When in fact, the bulk of the early supplemental
funds provided much-needed emergency housing and
other aid to families and support to provide
clean up and other emergency activities. - Lastly, there is often an assumption that these
allocations go directly to the cities and states
though a large portion of the federal allocations
are actually administered by the federal agencies.
19From Editorial Desk of the Wall Street Journal
(August 29, 2006)
- The post-Katrina spend-fest in Louisiana will be
remembered as one of the greatest taxpayer wastes
in US history. - New Orleans plight is not the result of federal
underspending. Uncle Sam has spent five times
more on Katrina relief than any other natural
disaster in the past 50 years.
20SR Implications Katrina
- Reframing the Debate 1
- Concern that this can endanger long term federal
commitment to the Gulf. - Closing window of opportunity to learn from
Katrinas national implications. - Need to reframe arguments to build greater
support for the Gulf Coast. - Not just a natural disaster, but a disaster
produced by failed policy. - Implicating not just the Gulf, but everyone.
21SR Implications Katrina
- Reframing the Debate 2
- Not just a Gulf Coast (New Orleans) concern,
impacting everyone. - Katrinas impact was not a geographic anomaly,
but the result of heightened vulnerability
created by neglectful policy. - These same policies have created conditions of
vulnerability in many places throughout the
nation. - Creating the potential for future Katrinas.
22SR Implications Katrina
- A Failure of Policy Infrastructure
- The impact of Katrina must be viewed as a failure
of public policy, primarily the result of our
nations disinvestment in the key infrastructure
needed to support our society. - Physical infrastructure Allowing critical
physical infrastructure to decay (leveesroads),
while wasting infrastructure investments in
undeveloped areas. - Social infrastructure Cuts to critical social
programs to help connect people to opportunity,
stabilize low income neighborhoods. - The result of this neglect has created conditions
of extreme vulnerability in many urban
neighborhoods (racialized vulnerability).
23Disinvestment in Critical Infrastructure for
Urban Areas
- Katrina directly illustrated the national trend
of disinvestment in critical infrastructure for
urban areas - Poorly maintained levy systems
- Insufficient public transportation
24SR Implications Katrina
- Physical Infrastructure
- The American Society of Civil Engineers rates the
nations infrastructure investments, maintenance
and quality at a Grade of D or Poor (Source
2005 Infrastructure Report Card for the Nation). - U.S. infrastructure requires an investment of
1.6 trillion every 5 years to maintain its
capacity. - Only 2 of the annual national budget is
earmarked for infrastructure spending therefore,
funds are continually short. - The Army Corps of Engineers currently has a
backlog of uncompleted projects costing 58
billion and spanning ten years. -
25SR Implications Katrina
- Disinvestment in Critical Infrastructure for
Urban Areas - These trends are not unique to New Orleans and
occur in many communities in a variety of ways - Disinvestment in public transit, in favor of
expenditures on highways and roads. - Policies that promote sprawl in suburban areas,
while stripping urban areas of investment. - Declining federal resources for urban areas,
despite the great need to maintain existing
infrastructure in our cities.
26SR Implications Katrina
- Social Infrastructure
- While general conditions of economic stability
are growing worse for many Americans, many of the
safety net programs (critical social
infrastructure) in the United States have been
diminished. - Social safety net cuts in the most recently
proposed Congressional Budget - Medicaid cut by 16 billion over next 10 years
- More burden for Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families shifted to states (estimated to cost
more than 8 billion) - 343 million cut for foster care
- 11 cut in Community Development Block Grant
funding to cities - Annual housing cuts for 2006
- 134 million cut to public housing funding in
2006 - Elimination of 35,000 section 8 vouchers
27A Failure to Invest in Ourselves
- A failure to invest in the social capital of our
citizens so that they can grow to be contributing
members of our society. - This parallels failure to invest in our
neighborhoods and communities. - You can not expect returns without a willingness
to invest capital.
Post Katrina Graffiti in New Orleans
28SR Implications Katrina
- Producing Extreme Social Vulnerability
- This disinvestment and neglect has created
conditions and neighborhoods of extreme
vulnerability in many of our cities, this has
national implications. - A 2002 United Nations Development Programme
report defines social vulnerability as - the degree to which societies or socio-economic
groups are affected by stresses and hazards,
whether brought about by external forces or
intrinsic factorsinternal and externalthat
negatively impacts the cohesion of a country.
29SR Implications Katrina
- Policy Framework for Change
- A renewed call for
- Responsible government
- Government action that is responsible and
responsive to everyone, especially our most
vulnerable populations and neighborhoods. - Embracing policies that affirmatively work to
connect vulnerable populations to opportunities. - Investment
- Recommitment by the federal government to
reinvest in our nations critical physical and
social infrastructure. - Producing benefits far beyond the Gulf Coast.
30SR Implications Katrina
- Linked Fates Coalition Building
- The Institute has been working with the National
Alliance to restore Opportunity to the Gulf
Coast. - To raise the call for more responsible
government, government which does not create
conditions of vulnerability and promotes social
mobility. - For the Gulf Coast and the nation
- Work at this stage
- Op-ed placements
- Faith based organizing
- Collaboration with local organizations, media
attention - Research, white papers, public information
- For more information http//www.linkedfate.org
31Beyond New OrleansStructural Racism and
Strategic Interventions
- What are Strategic Interventions?
- Points of pressure where collective action is
needed (specific and general impact). - Points of pressure where we realized the need to
think about our linked fate for long-term and
lasting change. - How do we identify Strategic Interventions?
- We need to identify the Veto Players/Relevant
Actors needed for transformative change. - Furthermore, we need to also know who occupies
these power positions for determining which power
lever would have more impact (transformative
power) acknowledging the resources at-hand. - Keep in mind that transformative change takes
time and energy.
32Beyond New OrleansStructural Racism and
Strategic Interventions
- What are the implications of an SR understanding?
- Need to realize (and think of) that institutional
arrangements create racialized patterns. - Need to make visible these racialized
arrangements and realized their
socially-constructed nature (i.e., they are not
inevitable). - Need to be aware of not falling into a localist
perspective. - Need to be aware of the importance to build a
movement (capacity). - Need to be aware of the necessity to locate the
relevant players/actors.
33Housing Thompson v. HUD
- Intervention Litigation-based intervention to
link Baltimores public housing residents to
communities of opportunity. - Status In remedial phase, case was originally
filed-in. - Actors Maryland ACLU, Legal Defense Fund NAACP,
plaintiff class of 14,000 public housing
residents, and also involves coalition of local
and national advocates.
34Housing Thompson v. HUD
- Plaintiffs propose providing desegregative
housing opportunities in the regions high
opportunity neighborhoods to remedy HUDs fair
housing violations - with the goal of providing nearly 7,000
affordable housing opportunities in high
opportunity communities to public housing
residents who volunteer to relocate in ten years. - Aligned with proposals to provide support
services for residents who volunteer for the
program.
35Housing Thompson v. HUD
- Structural Racism Component
- By affirmatively connecting residents to
opportunity structures such as high performing
schools, safe neighborhoods, and employment in
the Baltimore region, the remedy will improve the
life outcomes of participants. In addition, the
remedy will allow new possibilities for
redevelopment in Baltimores distressed inner
city neighborhoods. - Lessons Learned
- Litigation approach is both time and resource
intensive - Anticipate impediments
- A coalition of local organizations is
collaborating to provide support services to
Thompsons participants and working to anticipate
and void resistance from suburban residents.
36Moving Forward Proposed Solutions
- To address these inequities, we propose
equity-based regionalism - An equity-based, structural approach that
emphasizes the region as the primary geographic
unit determining the distribution of opportunity
and resources. - Equity-based regionalism focuses on KEY
opportunity structures. - Equity-based regionalism re-conceptualizes these
structures and relationships not just for people
of color, but for ALL residents of a region. - Without re-conceptualizing these structures and
relationships everyone will come up short.
37Linked Fate
- Why should those living in inner-ring, outer-ring
suburbs, and exurbs care about inner-city
disparities? - A region and all its residents share a linked
fate. - This issue is particularly important today.
- To thrive, regions must be competitive in the
global economy. - Regions cannot compete with wasteful and
redundant services, and fragmented governments. - Research suggests that regions who utilize
regional policies are economically (and socially)
healthier.
38Addressing Racial Tensions
- In order to move forward and address the our
nations racialized poverty and economic
insecurity, we must raise awareness and address
the racial tensions which initially created
inequities. - We must use race as a transformative bridge, to
improve conditions for all. - Race should not be used as a divisive phenomena,
as it historically has been used.
39Coalition Building
- We need to recognize our connectedness and
develop and implement solutions that benefit ALL
members of society. - Linked-fate
- Targeted Universalism
- This cannot be done in isolation
- Need diverse coalitions
- Connect with community based organizations,
social justice groups, local governments, the
business community, CDCs, philanthropic
institutions and large urban institutions (e.g.
universities).
40A New Paradigm
- Through collective imagination, we need to define
what the future should look like A New Paradigm! - Explicitly stated goals and principals provide a
common framework through which to pursue justice. - What is our alternative vision?
- A model where we all grow together.
- A model where we embrace collective solutions.
- Where race is experienced and addressed in a
different way. - No longer using race to divide and distract from
class struggle. - Using race to transform our society in a way that
lifts up all people.
41Concluding Thoughts
- What has Katrina taught us?
- That race and poverty are intricately
interconnected in our society. - Illustrated the fragile state of our low income
urban communities. - Revealed our shared fate, Katrina impacted the
entire nation. - The response to Katrina will impact us all.
42Concluding Thoughts
- What has Katrina taught us?
- Demonstrated the inadequacy in resources devoted
to meeting the needs of our inner city
communities. - Levies and inadequate transit in New Orleans.
- What is lacking from your community?
- Indicated strong need for responsible
government (Being a good Social Citizen). - Responsible to the people, especially the most
sensitive populations.
43Concluding Thoughts
- The obstacles we face can seem insurmountable.
- Nevertheless, through a new paradigm and with
coalition building we can make great strides in
addressing the race and class disparities in our
nation. - Strategic transactional change, can ultimately
accomplish transformation. - Eyes on the prize(s)!
-
- Remember- We Have, and Can Make Progress!
44www.KirwanInstitute.org
45Additional Information on SR, Rebuilding New
Orleans, and beyond.
46Commitment to New Orleans?
- Pledges to rebuilt Levies at Hurricane 5 strength
remain unfulfilled. - Large parts of the City remain without
electricity and have limited public services. - Almost all schools remain shut down.
- Displaced residents soon will lose housing
assistance - Demolition of the homes of the displaced soon to
begin, limited protection from eviction. - The Citys plan for redevelopment offers little
guidance, support and assistance for displaced
residents those who want to return. - A Laissez-faire approach to bringing back New
Orleans?
47Core Principals for New Orleans and Beyond
- Develop and support safe, livable communities
that are connected to opportunities. - Provide sufficient financial resources to the
entire region, while doing no harm to critical
social programs. - Create an accountable and equitable regional
approach- include public participation that
assures effective political voice. - Ensure that the comprehensive public and
environmental health and safety needs of the
region and its residents are met.
48Core Principals for New Orleans and Beyond
- High quality educational opportunities are
critical to the health of a region and its
residents. - Create a long term economic development strategy
that produces an equitable, thriving, and
sustainable economy. - Economic development strategies must also support
local wealth creation and asset building. - Redevelopment must assure that equitable physical
and social infrastructure is provided to all
communities in the region.
49High (Dark Colors) and (Light Colors) Low
Opportunity Neighborhoods in New Orleans
50 Economic Wellbeing
Economic Well Being Rankings (out of 331
metropolitan regions)
City-Suburban Disparity Ranking (out of 331
metropolitan regions)
Data Lewis Mumford Center
Well being is determined by household and per
capita income, poverty , professional status,
unemployment, home owners and vacant housing
51Conditions for the African American Community
- In respect to the overall condition of the
African American community, the New Orleans
region rates poorly. - Of the 21 largest regions
- New Orleans recorded the 4th worst conditions for
African Americans.
52Lessons From Katrina SR Implications
53The Challenge
- What did Katrina illustrate? What problems are we
trying to address in our communities, regions and
society? - Two related problems
- Extreme racial segregation and extensive racial
disparity. - Declining opportunities for everyone, declining
regions, stagnation and decline of the middle
class. - These problems reinforce each other.
54Lessons From Katrina
- What has Katrina illustrated?
- The Profound Connection Between Poverty and Race.
- Growing Economic Insecurity for Middle and Low
Income Americans - Regional Inequity
- Result of Policies and Structures that Produce
Poverty and Segregation - Sprawl, School Conditions, Subsidized Housing,
Investment Disparities - Segregation from Opportunity
- Moving Forward and Proposed Solutions
Storm Survivors in New Orleans Photo from
Katrinahelp.com
Storm Survivors in New Orleans Photo from
Combined Federal Campaign of the National Capital
Area
55- "Almost all of them that we see are so poor, and
they are so black."Wolf Blitzer, on CNNs
Situation Room
56Race and Class
- Hurricane Katrina illustrated the profound
connection between race and poverty in the US. - Public awareness was collectively focused on the
abandonment in New Orleans along lines of race
and poverty, and images reinforced disparities in
a way that numbers could not. - New Orleans, and the nation are now experiencing
a second disaster with declining public support
and retrenchment.
57- It is important to recognize that other
communities of color were also disproportionately
affected by the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina,
including Vietnamese, Mexicans, Hondurans and
other communities of color.
Source Tides Foundation- Race Poverty The
Katrina Imperative
58The Link Between Race and Class
- What is the link between race and class?
- Racialized structures and policies have created
the extreme correlation of race and poverty in
our urban areas. - People then assume that only those harmed or
isolated are people of color. - In reality, these effects are far reaching and
impact everyone (shared fate). - Also harming Whites living in opportunity poor
communities. - And causing regional distress, harming everyone
in the region, even the elite.
59Growing Economic Insecurity
- Conditions of economic insecurity were
highlighted by Katrina - Poverty is increasing
- Decline of the middle class
- Continuing conditions of economic insecurity,
lack of health insurance, increased bankruptcy
and housing cost increases will continue to
propel these trends. - Historically, the decline of the middle class has
triggered a misplaced racialized response - we can not repeat this mistake.
60Is the Safety Net Being Pulled Away?
- While general conditions of economic stability
are growing worse for many Americans, many of the
safety net programs in the United States have
been diminished. - Social safety net cuts in the most recently
proposed Congressional Budget - Medicaid cut by 16 billion over next 10 years
- More burden for Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families shifted to states (estimated to cost
more than 8 billion) - 343 million cut for foster care
- 11 cut in Community Development Block Grant
funding to cities - and annual housing cuts for 2006
- 134 million cut to public housing funding in
2006 - Elimination of 35,000 section 8 vouchers
Source National Low Income Housing Coalition and
Center on Budget Policies and Priorities
61Will the Safety Net for New Orleans be Withdrawn?
- Despite numerous pledges to rebuild New Orleans
and help Katrina survivors, little redevelopment
is occurring and federal/public support is
withering. - The Citys plan for redevelopment offers little
guidance, support and assistance for displaced
residents those who want to return. - A Laissez-faire approach to bringing back New
Orleans?
Months after Katrina, the Ninth Ward Remains
Devastated
62Racial Inequity
- These regional inequities also correlate with
extensive racial inequities. - People (and neighborhoods) most impacted from
Katrina were more likely to be African American
and impoverished - In New Orleans, nearly 80 of the population in
flooded areas were African American - Incomes were nearly 1/3 lower in flooded areas
- and 1 out of 3 displaced African Americans were
in poverty.
Source Brookings Institute
63Gender and Hurricane Katrina
- In the aftermath of Katrina, much necessary
attention was paid to issues of race and class
while little focus was placed on the gender
implications. - Where there is race and class, there is always
gender. Class always has a gender class always
has a family structure. Race always is gendered,
and gender is always racialized. - Professor Zillah Einstein, Katrina and Her
Gendering of Race and Class, 2005
64Women and Hurricane Katrina
- A large number of the homeless and displaced in
Louisiana and Mississippi are women and their
children. - Households headed by women are now led by women
without houses. To speak of poverty without
mention of the intersection of gender only tells
part of the story.
- Poverty is tied to contraceptive and
reproductive rights, teenage pregnancy, lowered
womens wages, and inadequate daycare and
education. - By not paying attention the effects of Hurricane
Katrina on the lives of women in the Gulf Coast,
reconstruction efforts will leave them and their
specific needs behind.
AP/The Advocate, Richard Alan Hannon
65Urban Calamities
- Hurricane Katrina is one of the largest natural
disasters of modern time. Its scope and magnitude
called national attention to the Gulf Coast and
highlighted a myriad of governmental failures and
other physical and social vulnerabilities that
have plagued the region long before the onset of
the Hurricane. - A 2002 United Nations Development Programme
report defines social vulnerability as - the degree to which societies or
socio-economic groups are affected by stresses
and hazards, whether brought about by external
forces or intrinsic factorsinternal and
externalthat negatively impacts the cohesion of
a country.
Source United Nations Development Programme.
2002. Draft final report Vulnerability and Small
Island Developing States. University of the West
Indies Centre for Environment and Development
66Urban Calamities Continued
- Large-scale natural disasters are not the only
events with devastating effects on urban areas. - Social vulnerability is characterized by
increased growth in criminal activities, growing
rates of HIV/AIDS infection, growing rates of
children dropping out of school, declining age
of prison population, declining public health,
rotting public infrastructure, and migration of
skilled professionals. These occurrences are
symptoms of negative social processes resulting
in increased social vulnerability. - Like the Gulf Coast, many of the continued
problems facing American cities have devastating
effects that stem from fiscal policies and
structures.
Source United Nations Development Programme.
2002. Draft final report Vulnerability and Small
Island Developing States. University of the West
Indies Centre for Environment and Development
67More on Disparities
- Disparities are important, but not a sufficient
lens to understand the problems we face - Disparities can be a divisive frame to address
these issues. - What is your point of reference?
- Disparities do not address the decline in
regional health and the economic insecurity that
impacts everyone. - We need to not only address disparities, but grow
opportunities for everyone. - We need to not just set goals of racial parity
with Whites but improve conditions for everyone. - You can have less racial disparity if everyone is
doing poorly (The Great Depression).
68Racial/Regional Inequities Impact Everyone
- How do racial and social inequities impact
overall regional health? - Racial and regional inequities impact the health
of the entire region, and impact everyone in the
region. - The segregation tax (excessive housing costs)
paid by Whites to distance themselves from low
opportunity communities. - The region loses its competitive edge in the
global economy. - Inequitable schools that produce an unprepared
(undereducated) labor force. - Interregional economic competition that erodes
the regions collective economic voice and power. - Fragmented and redundant governments, underused
and redundant infrastructure in suburban areas. - An undercapitalized central city with declining
infrastructure and resources.
69A Failure to Invest in Ourselves
- Both at the federal, regional and local level,
inequities represent a failure to be good social
citizens. - A failure to invest in the social capital of our
citizens so that they can grow to be contributing
members of our society. - This parallels failure to invest in our
neighborhoods and communities. - You can not expect returns without a willingness
to invest capital.
70Racial Segregation and Concentrated Poverty
- Why were African American and poor neighborhoods
impacted the most from Katrina? - The dynamics of spatial inequity, combined with
patterns of racial segregation. - Flood risk in New Orleans was not equitably
distributed and followed historical patterns of
segregation in the City.
After levee breaks, the Ninth ward rapidly floods
in New Orleans. Photo by Ted Jackson/NEWHOUSE
NEWS SERVICE)
Evacuees sit stranded in the streets outside the
Convention Center of New Orleans in the aftermath
of Hurricane Katrina September 3, 2005.
REUTERS/SHANNON STAPLETON
71African American Population in New
Orleans
72Concentrated Poverty
- Why were most areas impacted by Katrina poor?
- New Orleans has some of the most severe levels of
concentrated poverty in the nation. - In respect to concentrated poverty, Milwaukee is
not far behind New Orleans (ranking 9th
nationally).
73Effects of Policies and Structures
- These conditions of inequity and segregation are
a result of racialized policies and structures
that have also - Promoted sprawl
- Led to disparities between schools
- Concentrated subsidized housing
- Exacerbated disinvestment in critical
infrastructure for urban and inner-city areas - As a result of these structures and policies,
many people are segregated from opportunity in
New Orleans (and most metropolitan areas). - Opportunity Segregation
74Policies that Favor Sprawl
- Policies that promote sprawling suburban and
exurban development exacerbate the isolation of
inner city communities - Pulling resources and people away
- Driving segregation and regional inequities
- Urban sprawl is an example of a phenomenon that
impacts both regional health and heightens racial
disparity/segregation - Diminishes opportunity for everyone
75Sprawl In New Orleans
- Sprawling development (and suburban flight) are
evident in New Orleans - Between 1982 and 1997
- The New Orleans region lost 1.5 of its
population, but its urban land increased by 25. - This development has destabilized inner city
communities, furthering their isolation.
Source Brookings Institute and Sierra Club
76Concentrated Subsidized Housing
- Affordable housing policies also work to create
social/racial isolation and promote concentrated
poverty. - Policies which have concentrated subsidized
housing in impoverished, racially concentrated
inner city areas. - Exclusionary zoning that keeps out most
affordable housing in growing affluent suburbs. - These trends are evident in New Orleans.
77The Correlation of Poverty and Subsidized
Housing in New Orleans
78Disinvestment in Critical Infrastructure for
Urban Areas
- Katrina highlighted the national trend of
disinvestment in critical infrastructure for
urban areas - Poorly maintained levy systems
- Insufficient public transportation
79Disinvestment in Critical Infrastructure for
Urban Areas
- These trends are not unique to New Orleans and
occur in many communities in a variety of ways - Disinvestment in public transit, in favor of
expenditures on highways and roads. - Sprawling development that pulls resources away
to newly developing areas. - Declining federal resources for urban areas.
- Despite the great need to maintain existing
infrastructure in our cities.
80Inequities in Transportation Policy and Spending
- As witnessed in the aftermath of Katrina, public
transportation is critical to low income
households. - Nearly a 29 of African Americans in New Orleans
had no access to a vehicle. - Many were trapped with no viable way to leave the
city during the storm, or no viable way to reach
employment prior to the storm. - Despite the desperate need for public
transportation, government expenditures always
favor highways and private auto travel. - For every 100 spent on highways, Louisiana spent
17 on public transit.
Katrina Survivors waiting for transit to leave
the superdome.
Source U.S. Census and Sierra Club, Sprawl
Report 2001
81Most Severely Flooded Areas were Transit
Dependent African American Neighborhoods
Transit Stop Destroyed by Katrina
82 Sprawling DevelopmentWho Pays for New
Infrastructure?
- Development in the suburbs and exurbs create
tremendous costs for the public sector. - Schools, water and sewer, fire and police
protection, roads and sidewalks, parks and other
public services. - Research in Oregon has found that that average
new home costs the public sector 33K in
infrastructure costs.
83Declining Federal Resources for Urban Areas
- Many of our urban areas have depressed tax bases
due to population loss, vacant properties and job
losses. - While urban communities have diminished capacity
to meet their needs, they often have the highest
demand for public services - High poverty neighborhoods, maintaining critical
regional infrastructure (downtown), high-need
schools, and old existing infrastructure that is
at the end of its life cycle. - While need is growing, federal support is
declining - As evidenced by federal cuts to critical urban
programs - housing, community development etc.
- Between 2003 and 2004, federal grants to
Milwaukee County decreased by 15.6, representing
a loss of over 290 million.
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Inflation Adjusted
Dollars
84Effects of Policies and Structures
- What are the cumulative effects of these policies
and structures? - Opportunity segregation
- Social Isolation
- Limited access to opportunity structures
- Creation of high and low opportunity communities
- Often coexisting with severe racial disparity
- What are opportunity structures, how do we define
and measure opportunity?
85Defining Opportunity
86Opportunity Structures
- Individuals exist within this interconnecting
relational web of opportunity structures. - Opportunity structures are the resources and
services that contribute to stability,
advancement and quality of life. - Opportunities are distributed geographically-
inner city residents are walled off from
opportunities. - Thus, where you live is as important as what you
live in!
87The Dynamics of Opportunity in New Orleans
- These trends of opportunity exclusion are evident
in the New Orleans region. - Low opportunity neighborhoods in New Orleans
- Were more likely to be African American
neighborhoods - Were more likely to be flooded
- How will these neighborhoods be rebuilt?
- Will they be high opportunity communities or
replicate pre-Katrina inequities?
88High (Dark Colors) and (Light Colors) Low
Opportunity Neighborhoods in New Orleans and
Flooded Areas (Red)
89Other Structural RacismIntervention Examples
- Education
- Choice is Yours (Minneapolis)
- Health Care
- SEIU/MAC West (Chicago)
- Resources/Infrastructure
- Fix it First (Michigan)
- Multi-racial coalition-building
- Texas 10 Percent Plan
- K-Mart Unionization (Greensboro, NC)
90Education The Choice is Yours, School Mobility
in Minneapolis
- Intervention School mobility program designed as
part of a remedy to a school funding adequacy
case. - Status Despite initial problems attracting
participants, the program is widely popular now
with students (and inner city students are
performing as well as their suburban counterparts
in their new schools).
91Education The Choice is Yours, School Mobility
in Minneapolis
- Background
- The Choice is Yours is a school choice program
for families qualifying for free or
reduced-priced lunches who live in the City of
Minneapolis. - The program allows students to access suburban
public schools as well as magnet schools (and
provides transportation).
92Education The Choice is Yours, School Mobility
in Minneapolis
- Structural Racism Component By connecting
students to low poverty suburban schools, the
program remedies the economic and racial
segregation facing inner city students and
impacting their educational outcome. - Lessons Learned
- Issues of Scale The program is successful, but
its reach is limited (impacting 2,000 students).
What happens to the 43,000 students left behind? - Linking Interventions The program could be more
impactful if linked with the regions housing
mobility program (which is currently being
pursued), thereby expanding the scope/scale of
the intervention.
93Health Care SEIU, MAC West and Hospital
Disinvestment in Chicago
- Intervention Organizing an advocacy initiative
to stop hospital closures and patterns of
disinvestments in hospitals located in
communities of color. - Status Initiative successful in stopping a
hospital closure on Chicagos south side. - Actors MAC West (faith based social justice
coalition) and SEIU (labor advocates).
94Health Care SEIU, MAC West and Hospital
Disinvestment in Chicago
- Working collaboratively with Service Employees
International Union (SEIU), MAC has worked on a
successful campaign to address the undermining of
a significant anchor institution. - Their work identified racialized redlining by
Advocate in their spending and investment
patterns - the coalition is now advocating for a Community
Reinvestment Act style of health care legislation
for IL.
95Health Care SEIU, MAC West and Hospital
Disinvestment in Chicago
- Structural Racism Component Hospitals are
critical anchor institutions with wide spread
implications for their nearby neighborhoods,
impacting economic opportunities and also the
availability of health care (and likelihood of
finding primary care physicians) in these
communities of color. - Lessons Learned
- The power of coalitions by linking social
justice/faith based advocates and union
organizing advocates, the initiative was able to
build upon the strength of both groups to
successfully lobby to stop the planned closure.
96Resources/Infrastructure Fix it First
(Michigan)
- Intervention Reversing the historical trends of
public sector disinvestment in critical
infrastructure for Michigans urban areas. - Status Although some resistance was encountered
initially, the program is still continuing and
fewer resources are being spent to promote
sprawling suburban growth. - Actors Social justice, smart growth, and
environmental advocates (and the State Governor).
97Resources/Infrastructure Fix it First
(Michigan)
- Background
- Advocates lobbied for the States new Governor to
reform the States spending patterns on key
infrastructure that discriminated against urban
areas, while promoting sprawling growth and
development - The Governor was able to enact the policy quickly
as an executive order. - Resulting in the Fix it First Transportation
Policy The state of Michigan has reprioritized
transportation spending to refocus support into
existing infrastructure and expansion projects
have been put on hold as repairs to existing
roads are prioritized first - 19 suburban transportation projects were canceled
as part of the initiative.
98Resources/Infrastructure Fix it First
(Michigan)
- Structural Racism Component Changing
infrastructure spending patterns not only brings
resources back to urban communities but also can
impact urban sprawl (slowing the primary source
of disinvestment in urban areas). - Lessons Learned
- The power of coalitions Once again a coalition
with unusual allies (social justice advocates and
environmental advocates) was instrumental in
promoting change. - Grabbing the lowest hanging fruit on the tree
The intervention worked to create policy change
quickly by identifying a potential political ally
and action that could be implemented easily via
an executive order (i.e., creating policy change).
99Texas 10 Percent Plan
- Intervention Re-thinking admission procedures
and requirements followed by Texas public
universities. By law, every high schools top
10 senior students are automatically guaranteed
enrollment to Texas public universities (one
vote by a White-Conservative-Republican made the
Plan possible). - Status Currently being used and studies have
shown that student quality has not been
negatively affected. In addition, the students
accepted through the 10 Percent Plan have
attained higher GPAs than students accepted
under the test-based criteria (i.e., before the
10 Percent Plan). - Actors Latino legislative leaders, Civil Right
activists, grass-root organizers, and scholars.
100Texas 10 Percent Plan
- Structural Racism Component The strategic
intervention entailed a re-thinking (or being
able to see differently) what is taken for
granted today with extreme repercussions for life
prospects test-based criteria for university
acceptance. A simple shift (that took a great
amount of effort) to accepting all top 10 senior
students, became inclusive across racial and
socioeconomic lines.
101K-Mart Unionization (Greensboro, NC)
- Intervention Unionizing K-Marts distribution
center at Greensboro, NC because these workers
received the lowest salaries for comparable
K-Mart jobs. - Actors Distribution centers workers and The
Pulpit Forum. - Structural Racism Component Lower wages and less
benefits for the same type of job within the same
company. The only difference was that
Greensboros distribution center was majority
non-white, but it was also affecting those whites
working there.
102Texas 10 Percent Plan K-Mart Unionization
- Lessons Learned for both of these two examples
Political Race The project of political race is
a direct challenge to a White discursive
structure. It does not depend on the
substitution of another discursive framework,
such as class-based inequality, but looks instead
to the places where race, politics, culture, and
economic intersect. Political race is not
something you are its something you do. Its a
decision you make. (107)
103Lessons Learned From Example Interventions
- The power of coalitions
- All of the interventions required a coalition of
groups (often of non-traditional allies) to
create success, but resources are needed to
create and support these coalitions. - Different methods produce change
- Litigation based interventions are both costly
and time consuming, other approaches may also be
appropriate, such as influencing policy through
executive decision (as was done in Michigan),
public organizing (Chicago and Greensboro),
legislative intervention (Texas), among other
possibilities. - Bringing interventions to scale
- By linking interventions (for example linking
housing and education initiatives) in
Minneapolis, a program can be more fully brought
to scale and become more impactful.
104Lessons Learned From Example Interventions
- Using interventions to catapult other
initiatives - Both the Chicago and Michigan examples provided
spring boards to launch other advocacy
initiatives (interventions). - Expect and anticipate resistance and for
structures to readjust - Thompson provides a good example of an
intervention designed to anticipate resistance
and which is open to deal with changing
conditions - the remedy is intended to be goal based, not
process based in order to adjust to the changing
conditions in Baltimores housing market that may
create re-segregation.
105Some Recommended Readings
- Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo (1997). "Rethinking
Racism Toward a Structural Interpretation."
American Sociological Review, Vol. 62, No. 3
(Jun.), pp. 465-480. - California Newsreel (2003). http//www.pbs.org/rac
e/000_General/000_00-Home.htm - Cashin, Sheryll D. The Failures of Integration
How Race and Class Are Undermining the American
Dream. New York Public Affairs,2004. - Feagin, Joe. Racism and the White Power
Structure The Willie Horton and Sister Souljah
Cases. In White Racism The Basics. New York
Routledge, 1995. - Goldberg, David, Racial Americanization,
AmeriQuests, Vol. 1, No. 1, (2004).
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