Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Let’s Just Get Along: Poll Passes Up Structural Analysis of Race
Bill Quigley
09 Jan 2008

by Seth Wessler

PollCartoon

Measuring racial attitudes is notoriously difficult, and using polls to probe the extent of institutional racism can only be useful if the pollsters are clear on what institutional racism actually is. Surveys of individual attitudes towards various ethnic and racial groups can yield only subjective data on how folks "get along" - or think they are getting along. In the end, any survey that "starts with an assumption that race and racism are primarily issues about how X individual of one race feels about Z individual of a different race" is of limited utility. Racism is more than the sum of a nation's individual human attitudinal parts. It's a system.

 

Let's Just Get Along: Poll Passes Up Structural Analysis of Race

by Seth Wessler

This article originally appeared in RaceWire, the ColorLines Blog.

"The poll is bound by a narrow understanding of race and racism."

Pollpeople Race, racism, and racial stereotypes run deep according to a new opinion poll of over a thousand Blacks, Latinos and Asians by New American Media. The poll asserts that people of color in different groups don't trust each other and feel like race, racism and ethnic cleavages are just as present as they've always been despite some hope for change.

No surprise thus far. But where do we take this old news?

The poll is framed as something new and, to a certain extent, actually asking people of color what they think about race and racism is a step in the right direction. But the poll doesn't quite do what it could because it is bound by a narrow understanding of race and racism on the front and back ends. The poll, like so many other efforts to figure out "race relations," starts with an assumption that race and racism are primarily issues about how X individual of one race feels about Z individual of a different race.

On the front end, we've got a problem with the questions themselves. Have you ever dated someone of a different race?; Do you have any Black friends, Asian friends, Latino friends?; Would you rather do business with white people or Asian people?. As a result of asking these questions, the poll offers the same answers we always get: Racism is a problem and racial divisions are serious problems. In response: lets just get along.

On the back end, the way the poll is used; the messages we take from it; and the action we propose to take, all risk being similarly bound by an individualized understanding of racism. But running stories in the ethnic media about mixed-race relationships isn't going to solve the problem of racism.

"Racism runs deep because it is ingrained in the institutions, the laws, the policies, and the cultural currents that dominate."

Racism is a societal problem; it is structural and historical. It runs deep because it is ingrained in the institutions, the laws, the policies, and the cultural currents that dominate. And herein lies the problem with the poll: it assumes that individuals aren't influenced by the dominant messages and frames that we hear over and over, and it doesn't question the institutional basis of them.

The point is this: if the goal is to encourage the creation of a multiracial civil society, then racism needs to be addressed through institutional and structural interventions. Taking race seriously in this context means asking questions about media's role in perpetuating racist policies, institutional practices and social myths that pit groups against each other. The New American Media poll could help us to move in this direction but it will have to be taken to the pedestal and used to reshape the messages in the ethnic media and mainstream media.

When we build a society that values all people, a just society that does not punish and abandon people of color, then maybe we'll have a society where people trust each other.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles. Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • from mississippiriverdelta.org
    Justin Hosbey, J.T. Roane
    A Totally Different Form of Living: On the Legacies of Displacement and Marronage as Black Ecologies
    01 Dec 2021
    This is a brief reflection on water, swamps, bayous, wetlands, and Black life in the United States, and the forms of freedom and racialized unfreedom that these ecologies have facilitated.
  • The Racist, Imperialist War on Venezuela
    Glen Ford , BAR executive editor
    The Racist, Imperialist War on Venezuela
    24 Nov 2021
    We are reprinting Glen Ford’s 2019 article on Venezuela not to demonstrate that he was prescient on the issue of U.S.-Venezuela policies, but because it is still relevant and demonstrates the t
  • Kenyan Families Say U.S. Government Fueling “War on Terror” Disappearances and Killings, Demand Records
    Center for Constitutional Rights
    Kenyan Families Say U.S. Government Fueling “War on Terror” Disappearances and Killings, Demand Records
    24 Nov 2021
    Security forces trained by the CIA and the UK's MI6 use the "war on terror" as justification for killing and abducting Kenyans. In fact, the US/EU/NATO axis wage a war of terror against African
  • Rittenhouse and Verdict Mania
    Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Rittenhouse and Verdict Mania
    23 Nov 2021
    Black people give great attention to certain court cases in hopes of receiving justice when the system is designed to be unjust.
  • The Delusional Commitment to the Doctrine of “Full Spectrum Dominance” is leading the U.S. and the World to Disaster
    ​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
    The Delusional Commitment to the Doctrine of “Full Spectrum Dominance” is leading the U.S. and the World to Disaster
    23 Nov 2021
    U.S. actions around the world seem mysterious unless the commitment to white supremacist notions of domination is clearly understood.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us