Institutional Racism
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While it is almost established that the discussions on race in the contemporary United States center around a dominant ideological framework of the notion of color blindness, it is in the consciousness of Americans that racial inequality is better understood as being derived from the individual, or the cultural traits, and not based on systemic racism. The concept that describes racial attitudes that are held by a section of white Americans in the contemporary times is helped understood by colorblind racism which has been developed in the recent years (Burke, 2016).
Another interesting factor that these researchers found was that the level of awareness about racism and color blind racism and inequality was more prevalent among the white Americans when compared to what the existing theories might suggest (Manning, Hartmann, & Gerteis, 2015). Many individuals, such as myself, often feel that minorities are more likely to be associated with certain issues, such as being involved the sale and/or use of drugs. This study will therefore examine racism and its relationship to addiction, as well as other aspects of discriminatory practices, that have been established through peer reviewed articles and research works that have been published in recent years.
This paper discusses the relationship between racism and the prevalence of drug abuse and addiction in the U.S. When an individual injects or intakes a substance like alcohol, cocaine or nicotine and fins the engagement pleasurable but which can have health implications and prevent the conduct of regular course of life for the individual with continued use, it is termed as addiction (Beckett, 2012). While the term addiction is used in several ways, research and literature has linked the use of addictive drugs to racism color blind racism in the U.S. This becomes obvious when researchers find that law enforcement agencies tend to put more focus in dug control in localities with a dominant black population or a minority population (Bucerius, 2015).
In her article "Race, Drugs, and Law Enforcement in the United States," J. Fellner, (2009) writes that anti-drug efforts are more focused to keep the black population away from drugs and such efforts leave the white population relatively untouched. While these efforts are intended for the betterment of the minority population, its emphasis on the black population itself is a silent way of practicing color blind racism (Fellner, 2009). The study will also try and establish my belief that perhaps certain minority groups are more at a disadvantage to becoming addicted to drugs/alcohol and it is also necessary to consider many of the indirect factors related to the increases in addiction rates such as lower socioeconomic status, relatively less employment opportunities, and other factors that are commonly associated with drug addiction.
Background Research
The notion that in the United States there is seemingly no racism, particularly based on color, has been negated by many researchers throughout the years. Recent studies and surveys have found many results to the contrary. The idea that racism is present in many sections of American society has been established through several research studies such as the one published by OiYan Poon, Dian Squire, Corinne Kodama and Ajani Byrd (2015), where they reviewed 112 works conducted on Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) in respect to higher education. The study's findings indicated that there were limitations in the anti-racist framework which designated a certain degree of White domination in the higher education sector (Poon et al., 2015). Many have also argued that there should be no discrimination on the basis of race for any individual from any minority community, and it should not affect the selection of that individual, is supported by another work by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva of Duke University who argues: "the 'new racism,' or the set of mostly subtle, institutional, and seemingly nonracial mechanisms and practices that comprise the racial regime of "post-racial" America, has all but replaced the old Jim Crow order" (Bonilla-Silva, 2015). He further contends that the concept of color-blind racism is "slippery and has a 'beyond race' character" (Bonilla-Silva, 2015). He concludes that the new and the more so-called 'civil' manner of maintaining racial justice is, in fact, a "more formidable way of maintaining racial domination" (Bonilla-Silva, 2015). Furthermore, meta-analytic findings in previous research studies, clearly point to the fact that the attempt in recent years by many institutions, including many efforts on a more individual level to be more 'civil' and to do away with racial discrimination, has in fact...
Example of the least severe would be changes in eye contact, from other students and/or faculty or person or people moving away from the person in a social situation as compared to severe which would be an overt usage of a derogatory term such as the N word in an angry manner or other racially derogatory terms and will also include acts of vandalism to property or physical violence.
Two, countries or world leaders might act with selfish motives. For instance, genocide might be ignored if that country is a valuable trading partner or a member of a strategic alliance. Non-Violent Civil Disobedience Discussion 1: Mahatma Ghandi, Martin Luther King, Jr. And Nelson Mandela all organized massive movements based on non-violent solutions to major social crises. In each of these cases, non-violent solutions resulted in positive social change. Ghandi secured
Bonilla-Silva focuses on black-white relationships, but such styles are also seen in the actions of groups like Asians Against Affirmative Action. Many members of this group profess sympathy for minorities like African-Americans and Hispanics, but their lawsuits against school admissions committees that look at race as a decision factor belie their claims of color-blindedness. The naturalized style is evident in arguments of groups that look at supposed natural abilities and
How the Black Lives Matter Movement Changed the Law Enforcement Landscape Abstract Today, the United States faces multiple existential threats from a global Covid-19 pandemic and the concomitant economic downturn as well as rising racial tensions following the murder of an African American man, George Floyd, on May 25, 2020 by officers with the Minneapolis police department. This event, taking place amidst a once-in-a-century global pandemic with many Americans already nerve-wracked, served
This type of zoning began to be enforced because of integration, which many Americans were opposed to. In recent years, the idea of exclusionary zoning still lingers as a topic of debate. This is not only an issue of race but also an issue of affordable housing for low income workers. According to Sternlieb (1973) Exclusionary zoning and subdivision control in the suburbs as a means of preserving the community status
.. One of the many ways I will act to end racism in my classroom, and in my life outside school, will be to make sure I demonstrate supportive encouragement in a vocal way for children of color or any notable characteristic that is capable of becoming stigmatized by peers, because when children see adults especially in institutional roles of power modelling behavior that destigmatizes vulnerable students, they are highly receptive
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