Wednesday, March 27, 2024

3.05 Race

Please begin by reflecting on what you have already come to understand about "race" by answering numbers 1-6 using this Google form.

On your marks...Prior Knowledge Questions:

Answer the following questions off the top of your head.  Use what you have learned until now to answer.  

1.  What is race?  Define it.  What determines what race a person is?  
2.  Is race scientific?
3.  How many races are there? 
4.  Name as many of the races as you can.  
5.  What race are you?    
6.  Do you have any reluctance to discussing race?


Outline for this lesson:

Race is difficult to discuss - why?
What is race? Is it biological?
How is race socially constructed - cross-culturally? 


This lesson is the beginning of our next social inequality - race.  

For today's lesson, please read the introductory paragraph below. 

Recall our earlier unit on the sociological perspective.  We learned that sociology began with the study of inequality created by industrial society.  At first, the focus of inequality was on social class and power.  But not long after, American sociologists were applying the study to racial identity.  That will be the focus for this unit.   During the sociological perspective unit, we also learned that sociology sometimes "makes the familiar strange."  It sheds light on areas of our life that we never questioned before.  Learning sociology can be an eye-opening experience that is sometimes difficult to realize.  It has been my experience that this is especially true when learning about race; it may be eye-opening and may make you think about everyday life in a new way that might be uncomfortable.  We also learned that society constructs a reality for how we feel and experience the world.  Learning about race may challenge the previous feelings that we have had.  And, finally, remember that we are like fish in water never having to question or notice the water.  Racial identity is one of those cultural constructions that many of us have never questioned. 


Get set... The Difficulty of Race

Before we begin our study, I want to acknowledge that the topic of race can be a difficult topic to discuss.  

Difficulty Defining 
First, as evidenced by the student responses to questions 1 - 6 above, race is difficult to define.  Student responses vary for the number of races and what the races are.  This is despite the fact that race has a long history in the United States (over 400 years, as the 1619 Project highlighted), and race was written into the U.S. Constitution.  Americans have difficulty defining "race,"  yet, if I asked you about "race", you would know what I meant.  However, when asked to define race, students have difficulty agreeing on a definition.  We don't learn what race is in anatomy class or biology class or even in US history.  Despite not learning about race, there is a hegemonic acceptance of what race is; Americans learn about it from a young age so they assume that they know what it is and they never question it.  However, because we don't learn about it, we don't have the language to talk about it.  That limits our understanding even more and contributes to anxiety when talking about it.

However, it is important to realize that racial identities vary.  Different people have different ideas about racial identities and different societies have different ideas about racial identity.  And even within a group of people their preferred term may change over time.  Once you realize all of this, you can approach racial identity with humility and deference to individuals' identities.  


Especially Difficult for Whites (White Fragility)
For question number 6 above, not only do we seem to accept the idea of race without truly understanding it, but for many Americans, they do not have to think about race in their daily lives. Because America has been a white majority country, whites have traditionally been able to safely be considered the norm.  They can avoid discussing race, except when learning about it in relation to a particular situation - like in history class or when the protesters marched for George Floyd.   Because of that, whites do not have to think about being white and they do not worry about being judged for being white.  Whites are able to focus much more on their identity as an individual and not as a member of a racial group.  So, when race becomes the topic of discussion among whites, it can be uncomfortable as something they are not used to discussing.  

In my own experiences, as a young sociology student in undergrad, I felt uncomfortable talking about race and racism because of all of the above reasons.  It was really hard for me to learn about racism without feeling like I was being accused of something wrong.  I felt guilty and that made me defensive and obstinate.  However, as my academic journey continued, I learned more about race and gradually I became more comfortable teaching about it.  As I have taught about it over the last 20 years, I have noticed some of the same resistance to learning about race in the students that I teach.  It was not until I read Robin DiAngelo's work that I had a name for the feelings that I originally had about race and the feelings that I now experience with my own students:  White fragility.  I want to acknowledge those feelings to help students understand the discomfort that you or your classmates might feel.  Hopefully in recognizing this discomfort and understanding it, makes it easier to learn about race throughout this unit and your life. 

Robin DiAngelo  has written extensively about race and has been teaching about race and racism for over 20 years.  During that time, she observed that many people have difficulty in discussing race and racism.  In a 2011 journal article, DiAngelo explained the difficulty in discussing racism with Whites.  She called the difficulty "White fragility" and expanded on the idea that whites have difficulty in discussing race and racism in a book titled the same.

Please watch DiAngelo explain her work in the 6-minute Youtube video from NBC news and also available at The Guardian.

Her website explains her work;
White people in North America live in a social environment that protects and insulates them from race-based stress. This insulated environment of racial protection builds white expectations for racial comfort while at the same time lowering the ability to tolerate racial stress. Although white racial insulation is somewhat mediated by social class (with poor and working class urban whites being generally less racially insulated than suburban or rural whites), the larger social environment insulates and protects whites as a group through institutions, cultural representations, media, school textbooks, movies, advertising, and dominant discourses. Racial stress results from an interruption to what is racially familiar. In turn, whites are often at a loss for how to respond in constructive ways., as we have not had to build the cognitive or affective skills or develop the stamina that that would allow for constructive engagement across racial divides. leading to what I refer to as White Fragility. White Fragility is a state in which even a minimum amount of racial stress becomes intolerable, triggering a range of defensive moves. These moves include the outward display of emotions such as anger, fear, and guilt, and behaviors such as argumentation, silence, and leaving the stress-inducing situation. These behaviors, in turn, function to reinstate white racial equilibrium. This book explicates the dynamics of White Fragility and how we might build our capacity in the on-going work towards racial justice.

7.  How would you answer someone who asked, "Does 'White fragility' mean that something is wrong with me because I'm white?"  


Difficulty Because of Fear of Label "Racist"
Finally, a third reason that race is difficult to learn about is because many whites think of racism based on the way racism became a part of the national consciousness.  As America moved toward racial equality during the civil rights movement, racists were seen as violent and extreme, like the KKK;  Racists were people who consciously hated minorities.  This was a very basic definition of racism that often reduced people to being either not racist or racist: either good or bad.  This reductionist label became a really awful label for Americans who are white.  As we have learned, people have complex identities and they are multifaceted.  They are not simply either racist or not. Instead, it is important to acknowledge that we all live in a society that has been historically racist, therefore we are all capable and, even likely, to exhibit behaviors and attitudes that are racist.  That might be uncomfortable to acknowledge, but it should not define us.  Not only are people complex and multi-faceted, but racism is as well.  It can be institutional and unintentional and explicit or implicit.  

As we talk about racism, try to see how people of different races are treated unequally.  Try not to feel defensive or accused.  This is a learning process that takes time.  It was a long road for me to understand this as well.  There is a good chance that everyone in this class has said something or done something that was racist.  It is healthy and realistic to acknowledge that our words or actions can be racist. However, as Bryan Stevenson says in his book, Just Mercy, "Each of us is better than the worst thing we have ever done."  So as we move forward, in terms of racism, focus on the words and actions and not on identity.  In other words, things that we say and do may be racist, but try to refrain from defining each other's identity as "racist." Say, "talking like that is racist" or "doing that is racist" rather than saying, "that person is a racist."  The latter labels an entire person's identity as racist and implies that it is unchangeable whereas identifying words, behaviors or policies as racist can help us work to change those things. 



8.  Do you understand why race might be difficult for many Americans to discuss?  Do you think you will have difficulty discussing race?  Which of the reasons above might make it most difficult for you?  


Because I recognize that race is difficult to discuss as I outline below, I want to encourage you to:
  • keep a beginner mind; be open
  • do not be afraid to ask questions
  • when discussing racism, try to focus on words, actions and policies (as opposed to identities); in other words, rather than saying a person is racist, try to focus on what words or actions are racist.
In conclusion, as we begin this unit, I want to acknowledge the difficulty of discussing race and helping you to frame it so that you can be open to learning about race going forward.  While the topic of race can be difficult and emotional, I want you to know that I am willing to help you understand and I want our classroom to be a safe space for understanding.  Trust me and trust the process, and don't be afraid to ask questions.  Be curious, not judgmental.

Some extra resources about the difficulties of discussing race:


Race!  What is it?





Debriefing the What Race Am I Quiz? above
The quiz highlights a number of realities about race:
  • We assume that race is biological, but our biological assumptions do not make sense.  In the case of the survey, there are people from different continents with different skin tones - there are people from every continent who have dark skin - not just Africa, and similarly, there are people with different eye shapes and hair types from all over the world too.
  • Second, we often use ethnicity, nationality or heritage to mean race but this doesn't always make sense.  For example, Russia is often considered a European nation and thus racially white, but large parts of Russia are located in Asia.  Are these people Asian or White and what defines that?
  • Lastly, this survey highlights a difficulty with race - For 160 years, the US defined race like you just did; census collectors looking at people and choosing their race.  But in 1965, the census started allowing people to self-identify their own race.  By this standard, we can't really know the race of any of the people in the survey unless they were asked to choose.

The anatomy and biology of race

Earlier,  I asked you to try and define race based on your prior knowledge.  Now, I want to clarify what race is (and is not).  

First, if you have access to a biology or anatomy textbook, please use the index to look up the definition of race.  If you do not have access to a biology or anatomy textbook, then please choose one of the bullet points below and examine the link for how they explain the biology of race.
  • Bill Nye explains why there is no way to define race biologically.
  • 2017 article from the NY Times explains that the latest evidence from genetics is that there is not a connection between genes and race.
  • Harvard School of Biomedical Sciences "there is no evidence that the groups we commonly call 'races' have distinct, unifying genetic identities. In fact, there is ample variation within races"
  • The U.S. National Library of Medicine and National Institutes of Health published this article which explains, "Humans have much genetic diversity, but the vast majority of this diversity reflects individual uniqueness and not race."
  • Race; Power of an Illusion Documentary FAQs answered by these experts.
  • The American Association of Physical Anthropologists published this statement about race, including, "There is great genetic diversity within all human populations. Pure races, in the sense of genetically homogenous populations, do not exist in the human species today, nor is there any evidence that they have ever existed in the past. "
  • Contexts sociology blog The press release reports the results of this panel’s initial analysis of almost 500 cases. Most startlingly, it reports that FBI examiners gave inaccurate testimony in 96% of those cases.... As a 2009 review of forensic science by the National Research Council (NRC) put it, “No scientifically accepted statistics exist about the frequency with which particular characteristics of hair are distributed in the population.”
  • Science Magazine "The study adds to established research undercutting old notions of race. You can’t use skin color to classify humans, any more than you can use other complex traits like height, Tishkoff says. 'There is so much diversity in Africans that there is no such thing as an African race'.”
  • Science Buzz: "...there’s more variation within any racial group than there is between them...Our genes are constantly moving around the planet. We’ve had 100,000 years of genes moving and mixing and re-assorting in countless different ways. We’re always mating outside our groups. [As a result, there’s] very little variation among us."
  • Live Sciencethere is only one human race. Our single race is independent of geographic origin, ethnicity, culture, color of skin or shape of eyes — we all share a single phenotype, the same or similar observable anatomical features and behavior - See more at livescience"...there is only one human race. Our single race is independent of geographic origin, ethnicity, culture, color of skin or shape of eyes — we all share a single phenotype, the same or similar observable anatomical features and behavior..."

9.  What does one of the scientific sources  above say about using race as a category?  


What is racial hegemony?

The answer to the questions at the start of this unit is that race is not a scientific term.  And so neither the biology nor the anatomy textbooks even mention race.  Race is not measurable in any objective way.  And races are not mutually exclusive of each other; in science, this is known as discrete classification.  Race is not a discrete category.  However, d
uring the 1800s, and for nearly a century afterward, scientists, including anthropologists and biologists and even sociologists, erroneously concluded that humans evolved from three distinct groups of hominids.  Known as the "essentialist theory," this incorrectly posits that each group started as a "pure race" in three separate locations: Mongolia, Caucasia, and Nigeria.  The theory also concludes erroneously that the three original racial groups eventually intermixed, but some individuals stayed "more pure" based on less mixing.  Using the scientific data that is available to us now, biologists, doctors, anthropologists, and sociologists now know that this is NOT true.  Instead of evolving separately, all humans began from a hominid in Africa and gradually spread out across the globe.  However,  this theory pervaded U.S. thinking so widely that the assumption that race is a discrete biological and scientific category continues to this day.  

This acceptance of race as a real scientific category without ever questioning it is called racial hegemony.  In the United States, we are so familiar with the idea of "race" that we use it all the time assuming that we know what it means, but we never stop to examine what it is.   If you were asked to identify the race of students in our room, I bet you would be able to say what "race" they are, but can you say what exactly "race" is?   In trying to understand race, sometimes we assume it is something that it is not.  Many Americans assume it is one of the terms below.  Read each of the following terms below and think about the following question:

Which of these terms have you used to define or describe race in the past?  Do you have questions about any of these terms?


Operationalizing terms


  • Nationality is the country where someone is a citizen.  For example, if your passport is from the U.S. then your nationality is the United States, often referred to as "American".
  • Ethnicity is a group of people linked by a common culture, ancestry and often associated with a geographic location.  For example, one might say that Italians are an ethnic group.  But ethnicity doesn't have to apply to a country, it can be a group like Assyrians, Deng (from the Sudan) or Roma people.
  • Heritage is where a person's ancestors can be traced to.
  • Genotype is an individual's specific combination of genes that makes up their DNA.  Mitochondrial DNA can be traced back to a common ancestor.  So scientifically, all humans share a common genetic lineage. This video explains that.

10.  Which of the above terms have you used to define or describe race in the past?  Do you have questions about any of these terms?


Note how the biology of the people in the quiz above does not reflect the people's heritage, ethnicity or nationality.  For example, Russia is generally considered a European country and thus "white" even though a large portion of Russia is in Asia.  


Phenotype and Race

Phenotype is the observable characteristics/traits that an individual manifests from their genotype interacting with the environment.  In other words, phenotype is how we look based on both our genes and the environment.  So, some people have lighter skin but in the sun it gets red, whereas others have lighter skin but in the sun it gets tan and yet others have darker skin - all of these are phenotypes.

Phenotypic Traits and Race; Humans look different, why is that not race?

Yes, humans have different phenotypes such as dark skin or curly hair.  These phenotypes do come from different genetic combinations, but these combinations are not divisible into distinct groups.  Instead, the divisions we create are arbitrary divisions. If you lined up all of the people in the world according to a trait, the divisions would be less obvious. It would look more like a spectrum that changes gradually, blending from one into another.  Height is one example in this graphic from the American Anthropological Association, UnderstandingRace.org that shows that deciding how to categorize people is arbitrary:

 


Skin color, one of the most obvious phenotypes in the U.S. and often the default for socially constructing race, exists on a spectrum.  America was started by Europeans who enslaved sub-Saharan Africans. These groups of people had different phenotypes.  For example skin color.  However, if we could line up the people from Europe all the way to sub-Saharan Africa, we would see a spectrum of skin color instead of distinct groups.  The second image above shows how skin color exists on a spectrum.  

Another example that demonstrates why the phenotypic trait of skin color is NOT a way to categorize people racially is from a post on the soc images blog, this artist created a palette of colors showing that human skin is much more of a spectrum than distinct groups.  See this post for more about the artist and the project, including a Ted Talk.
How would you divide up the palette below into different races?


11.  How would you answer someone who asked you, "Why can't skin color be used to categorize people into distinct races?"


Other Resources to help understand what race is not:

A Scientific Explanation of Skin Color
For an explanation on the biology of skin color, the article "Skin Deep" by Nina Jablonski and George Chaplin from Scientific American  explains the science behind skin color and how around the world, skin color would look more like a spectrum than distinct groups.  The map below from the article explains the correlation between UV light intensity and skin color.  Going back to our metaphor about the traits, do you see how the trait of skin color is a spectrum rather than distinct groups?



Nina Jablonski explains the significance of skin color in her Ted Talk here.

Anthony Peterson "What I am learning from my white grandchildren" at TED talks Antioch explains why race is NOT real but it does matter and why it's important to talk about race with children.  He notes that many of us teach that race is real but it doesn't matter and that teaches children the wrong message.


Genetic Research from the Transpacific Project shows multiple maps of genetic markers around the world.  
An explanation of genetic variation shows how complex it is here.  But the short explanation is that although there are some genetic markers that point to a shared genetic heritage, these markers don't correspond to racial differences and there can be more genetic similarity between people who are different "races" than those who are the same "race".


From Princeton U. Commons this map shows the spread of humans based on traceable gene mutations in mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosomes.

This article from Slate explains why ancestry kits do not explain race.  


Jefferson Fish also explains how race doesn't make sense in the article titled "Mixed Blood" from Psychology Today, 1995.


If this lesson was interesting, you might like Anthropology 105: Human Cultural Biology which is a tier 2 science.

12.  Do you understand that race is not a scientific topic; it cannot be measured discretely or distinctly using any biological trait?


So what is race?


Race is a social construction

Race is a socially constructed idea that humans can be separated into distinct and discrete groups based on biology.  For example, one society might say that there are 3 races in the world: Asian, African and white.  But as you will see, other societies have their own categories of race such as Dinka and Bantu and countries will use any combination of heritage, ethnicity, religion or phenotype to create their own ideas about race.   Another way to explain the definition of race is that race is the misguided/incorrect belief that people can be separated into groups based on their biological traits such as skin color, hair, eyes, nose, genes, etc...

There is no way to separate humans biologically, physically or scientifically into distinct racial groups.  If there was, then racial groups would be the same all over the world.  But they are not the same as Omi and Winant explain in their book Racial Formation.

The book by Omi and Winant called "Racial Formation" (1986) provides a detailed explanation of how race is socially constructed.  For a more extensive explanation, here is a video of Omi and Winant explaining their seminal work.





Instead of being biological or scientific, racial categories are socially constructed based on each country's social, cultural and political history.  In other words, each country creates its own racial categories based on the unique dynamics within that country.  
  • Racial categories vary around the world.
  • The categories are formed in each country because of the local social, cultural and political history.
Since race is not a scientifically discrete category some sociologists have started referring to people from different races as "identified as [race]" or "radicalized as [race]".  This emphasizes that racial identity is a social construction.

Race and Where You Live

Racial Identity in Japan
When I was in Japan, I asked some Japanese friends what races were in Japan and they said "nihon-jin and gai-jin," Which means "Japanese people and foreign people.  In other words, the Japanese think that there are Japanese people in the world and then there is everyone else.  And then I pressed him further and I said, " But aren't there different groups within Japanese culture?"
My friend finally said, " Ahh yes... there were ancient Japanese who settled the islands from the north and there were ancient Japanese who settled the islands from the south, and you know how to tell who came from where?  Earwax." That's right, earwax! He explained that some Japanese have dry flaky earwax and others have wet greasy earwax.  That determines where your ancestors came from and a different biological group that you are a part of- essentially a different race.  But that makes no sense to us because in the US we never think of earwax as part of race.


Race in Mexico
Mexico has a complex history involving Spanish imperialism.  Spain was already a mix of different ethnicities/heritages when it invaded Mexico and mixed with the first nations people living there as well as with black Africans brought there through the Atlantic slave trade.   The result is a complex mix of races.  Here are the racial groups from the early history of Mexico
  1. Mestizo: Spanish father and Indian mother
  2. Castizo: Spanish father and Mestizo mother
  3. Espomolo: Spanish mother and Castizo father
  4. Mulatto: Spanish and black African
  5. Moor: Spanish and Mulatto
  6. Albino: Spanish father and Moor mother
  7. Throwback: Spanish father and Albino mother
  8. Wolf: Throwback father and Indian mother
  9. Zambiago: Wolf father and Indian mother
  10. Cambujo: Zambiago father and Indian mother
  11. Alvarazado: Cambujo father and Mulatto mother
  12. Borquino: Alvarazado father and Mulatto mother
  13. Coyote: Borquino father and Mulatto mother
  14. Chamizo: Coyote father and Mulatto mother
  15. Coyote-Mestizo: Cahmizo father and Mestizo mother
  16. Ahi Tan Estas: Coyote-Mestizo father and Mulatto mother


Race in Brazil
As opposed to the U.S., Brazil has a much longer and more diverse history of interracial marriage between indigenous people, former slaves from Africa and Portuguese immigrants.  Because of this, Brazilians are far more conscious of physical variations within their population and less concerned with bloodlines and lineage.  For example, in 1976, the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) conducted a study to ask people to identify their own skin color.  Here are the 134 terms, listed in alphabetical order:
    Acastanhada (cashewlike tint; caramel colored)
    Agalegada
    Alva (pure white)
    Alva-escura (dark or off-white)
    Alverenta (or aliviero, "shadow in the water")
    Alvarinta (tinted or bleached white)
    Alva-rosada (or jamote, roseate, white with pink highlights)
    Alvinha (bleached; white-washed)
    Amarela (yellow)
    Amarelada (yellowish)
    Amarela-quemada (burnt yellow or ochre)
    Amarelosa (yellowed)
    Amorenada (tannish)
    Avermelhada (reddish, with blood vessels showing through the skin)
    Azul (bluish)
    Azul-marinho (deep bluish)
    Baiano (ebony)
    Bem-branca (very white)
    Bem-clara (translucent)
    Bem-morena (very dusky)
    Branca (white)
    Branca-avermelhada (peach white)
    Branca-melada (honey toned)
    Branca-morena (darkish white)
    Branca-p�lida (pallid)
    Branca-queimada (sunburned white)
    Branca-sardenta (white with brown spots)
    Branca-suja (dirty white)
    Branqui�a (a white variation)
    Branquinha (whitish)
    Bronze (bronze)
    Bronzeada (bronzed tan)
    Bugrezinha-escura (Indian characteristics)
    Burro-quanto-foge ("burro running away," implying racial mixture of unknown origin)
    Cabocla (mixture of white, Negro and Indian)
    Cabo-Verde (black; Cape Verdean)
    Caf� (coffee)
    Caf�-com-leite (coffee with milk)
    Canela (cinnamon)
    Canelada (tawny)
    Cast�o (thistle colored)
    Castanha (cashew)
    Castanha-clara (clear, cashewlike)
    Castanha-escura (dark, cashewlike)
    Chocolate (chocolate brown)
    Clara (light)
    Clarinha (very light)
    Cobre (copper hued)
    Corado (ruddy)
    Cor-de-caf� (tint of coffee)
    Cor-de-canela (tint of cinnamon)
    Cor-de-cuia (tea colored)
    Cor-de-leite (milky)
    Cor-de-oro (golden)
    Cor-de-rosa (pink)
    Cor-firma ("no doubt about it")
    Crioula (little servant or slave; African)
    Encerada (waxy)
    Enxofrada (pallid yellow; jaundiced)
    Esbranquecimento (mostly white)
    Escura (dark)
    Escurinha (semidark)
    Fogoio (florid; flushed)
    Galega (see agalegada above)
    Galegada (see agalegada above)
    Jambo (like a fruit the deep-red color of a blood orange)
    Laranja (orange)
    Lil�s (lily)
    Loira (blond hair and white skin)
    Loira-clara (pale blond)
    Loura (blond)
    Lourinha (flaxen)
    Malaia (from Malabar)
    Marinheira (dark greyish)
    Marrom (brown)
    Meio-amerela (mid-yellow)
    Meio-branca (mid-white)
    Meio-morena (mid-tan)
    Meio-preta (mid-Negro)
    Melada (honey colored)
    Mesti�a (mixture of white and Indian)
    Miscigena��o (mixed --- literally "miscegenated")
    Mista (mixed)
    Morena (tan)
    Morena-bem-chegada (very tan)
    Morena-bronzeada (bronzed tan)
    Morena-canelada (cinnamonlike brunette)
    Morena-castanha (cashewlike tan)
    Morena clara (light tan)
    Morena-cor-de-canela (cinnamon-hued brunette)
    Morena-jambo (dark red)
    Morenada (mocha)
    Morena-escura (dark tan)
    Morena-fechada (very dark, almost mulatta)
    Moren�o (very dusky tan)
    Morena-parda (brown-hued tan)
    Morena-roxa (purplish-tan)
    Morena-ruiva (reddish-tan)
    Morena-trigueira (wheat colored)
    Moreninha (toffeelike)
    Mulatta (mixture of white and Negro)
    Mulatinha (lighter-skinned white-Negro)
    Negra (negro)
    Negrota (Negro with a corpulent vody)
    P�lida (pale)
    Para�ba (like the color of marupa wood)
    Parda (dark brown)
    Parda-clara (lighter-skinned person of mixed race)
    Polaca (Polish features; prostitute)
    Pouco-clara (not very clear)
    Pouco-morena (dusky)
    Preta (black)
    Pretinha (black of a lighter hue)
    Puxa-para-branca (more like a white than a mulatta)
    Quase-negra (almost Negro)
    Queimada (burnt)
    Queimada-de-praia (suntanned)
    Queimada-de-sol (sunburned)
    Regular (regular; nondescript)
    Retinta ("layered" dark skin)
    Rosa (roseate)
    Rosada (high pink)
    Rosa-queimada (burnished rose)
    Roxa (purplish)
    Ruiva (strawberry blond)
    Russo (Russian; see also polaca)
    Sapecada (burnished red)
    Sarar� (mulatta with reddish kinky hair, aquiline nose)
    Sara�ba (or saraiva: like a white meringue)
    Tostada (toasted)
    Trigueira (wheat colored)
    Turva (opaque)
    Verde (greenish)
    Vermelha (reddish)

      13.  Choose one of these countries to comment on - Japan, Mexico or Brazil.  What is most striking about this classification?


      Can a plane ride change your race?
      Looking at the distinctions in Japan, Mexico and Brazil might not make sense to us because we view race so differently.  However, all of this is evidence that race is a social construction.   Read the passage below (also available here) and then answer the questions after.


      14. After reading the above passage, answer this:   
      Did the girl’s race change?  Why or why not?
      When finished, click here for an explanation.  Read the explanation then answer the question below.


      15.  Did you answer in number 2 the way I explained it above?  If not, do you understand the explanation?
      The next exercise will be examining different censuses from around the world.  You will see that depending on where you are, the country's census will classify you differently.  Open the following link in a new window and in #4 note how you would be classified in each country.  Feel free to simply type your response whether it is "white" or "other" or whatever.  Be sure to respond to each country's question(s).  
      Here is a link to different censuses around the world.

      16.  What are the different ways you would be categorized around the world? List them here.  Make a note of how many different ways you would be classified as around the world (this is number 5).

      17.  Count the number of different responses you had for number 4.  How many different ways would you be labeled?   

      18.  Choose one of the countries from the link above and hypothesize how the country's political, social or cultural history contributed to the way the country's people view race today.

      19.  Any questions about how race is a social construction based on where you live?

      Sunday, March 24, 2024

      3.04 Poverty

      Today's Lesson:

      • What are the difficulties in defining "poverty"?
      • What are the obstacles associated with the lowest social classes?
      In the last few lessons, we saw that the U.S. has a wide range of income and a substantial number of citizens who are low income.  But, how many of these low-income earners should be considered "poor"?  

      Defining Poverty
      The debate about how to define poverty dates back more than 100 years to the beginning of the 20th century.  Sociologist W.E.B DuBois may have been the first scholar to use the term poor related to a specific income.   This 2019 analysis from the Annie E. Casey Foundation explains some of the most common terms used to describe poverty in the United States today: official poverty measure and the supplemental poverty measure, as well as extreme povertylow income, and concentrated poverty.

      The official poverty measure is the way that the government has defined poverty since 1965.  It is an amount of income based on family size.  More recently, experts believe that the income level that the government has used as a threshold is too low and the actual number of Americans living in poverty should be much higher.   In any case, the official poverty measure threshold for a family of 4 in 2018 was $25,465.  About 12% of Americans fall into this threshold!  That's 39 million Americans!  Thirty. Nine. Million.  And that is the low end.  Most experts agree that actual poverty should be a much higher threshold.

      Besides the official number, there are other ways of calculating the actual number of people in poverty and these measure report higher numbers of poverty.  And then there is a substantial number of Americans who do not qualify as impoverished but they are so low income that they are considered at-risk.  They are working and getting by, but barely.  One accident or unfortunate event can thrust them into poverty.




      Playspent Online Simulation

      Living in poverty means many Americans have to make hard choices about their lives.  Try the playspent website which guides readers through the difficult choices that those in poverty must make.  When finished, please reflect on the simulation.

      What happened in the simulation that made it difficult for you to be economically stable?  Was there something that came up during the simulation that you had not thought about before?   



      Poverty and location

      Poverty, like the other social classes, is segregated within the U.S. so we do not always notice it.  Click on the map here

      Using the map from PovertyUSA above, what is the poverty rate for the United States?  What areas of the country have the highest rates of poverty?  

      Now on the poverty map, click on either the county where you are from or the county that LUC is in: Cook (Hint: it is the county at the bottom left of Lake Michigan :-)
      Which county did you examine and what was the rate? Is that higher or lower than the US rate overall?



      Effects of Poverty

      Poverty affects each of the areas below. Review the evidence that shows how being low income affects the people in that area.  
      • Health
      • Location/environment
      • Criminal Justice System

      Health

      The dynamics of social class that affect health are varied and complex. But recognizing them can be the first part of mitigating their effects as Americans with low income have a higher chance of dying at any age than a wealthy person. An accessible resource that is meant to engage communities and organizations is Unnatural Causes from the National Association of City and County Health Officials.



      As the website explains,

      Unnatural causes is a website and documentary about the connection between social class and health broadcast by PBS and now used by thousands of organizations around the country to tackle the root causes of our alarming socio-economic and racial inequities in health.
      The four-hour series crisscrosses the nation uncovering startling new findings that suggest there is much more to our health than bad habits, health care, or unlucky genes. The social circumstances in which we are born, live, and work can actually get under our skin and disrupt our physiology as much as germs and viruses.
      Among the clues:
      • It's not CEOs dropping dead from heart attacks, but their subordinates.
      • Poor smokers are at higher risk of disease than rich smokers.

      Furthermore, research has revealed a gradient to health. At each step down the class pyramid, people tend to be sicker and die sooner. Poor Americans die on average almost six years sooner than the rich. No surprise. But even middle-class Americans die two years sooner than the rich.

      Although more than a decade old, the documentary's premise is still sadly relevant. The website also contains recent updates and a discussion guide for viewing the documentary and engaging your community.


      From Voices For Illinois Children, we see that the number of children in poverty has been increasing and the effects can be very damaging; 
      Growing up in poverty can have serious and long-lasting effects on children’s health, development, and overall well-being. The effects of poverty have a well-documented impact on young children’s developing brains. And children who grow up in poverty are more likely to experience harmful levels of stress, more likely to struggle in school, and more likely to have behavioral, social, and emotional problems than their peers.

      Lead poisoning from the American Journal of Pediatrics;
      Impoverished black children, for example, are twice as likely as poor Hispanic or white children to have levels of lead in their blood that is at least 2.5 micrograms per deciliter. Some researchers have found that even that small amount of lead is enough to cause cognitive impairment in children — especially the kind that impacts their reading ability.


      Cardiovascular disease 
      from the National Institute of Health (NIH), Journal of Nutrition (2010); 
      Food insecurity was associated with self-reported hypertension and hyperlipidemia. Food insecurity was associated with laboratory or examination evidence of hypertension and diabetes. The association with laboratory evidence of diabetes did not reach significance in the fully adjusted model unless we used a stricter definition of food insecurity. These data show that food insecurity is associated with cardiovascular risk factors. Health policy discussions should focus increased attention on ability to afford high-quality foods for adults with or at risk for chronic disease.

       from the NIH, journal of Current Cardiology Reviews (2009); 

      Once homeless, equitable access to both preventative and remedial health care is lacking and is associated with a higher than average burden of cardiovascular disease [CVD] risk factors, morbidity and mortality and is accompanied by disproportionately high health care costs.

      Less access to healthcare, from the NIH, Journal of Community Health (2018);
      Having a low-income presents a variety of problems for families and children, with access to health care being the most complex and prevalent. Although there are many challenges for low-income families to access adequate health care in the United States, the key barriers identified in this review of literature are a lack of education, complications with health insurance, and a distrust of health care providers. Each obstacle is influenced by a myriad of factors that affect vulnerable sub-groups of low-income families. Acknowledging the barriers that prevent access to health care for low-income families is the first step towards determining future sustainable solutions.

      Affects brain development
       from the UW Madison, Institute for Research on Poverty (2019);
      Ongoing research, however, is moving beyond correlation to test a causal relationship between growing up in poverty and development in key parts of the brain that govern learning and behavior. Findings suggest that aspects of poverty that affect brain development go beyond limited financial resources to include neighborhood violence, low-quality schools, environmental toxins, and unstable family life. 


      Increased levels of stress, mental illness, suicide, and substance abuse from the Journal of the American Medical Association (2011);
      Low levels of household income are associated with several lifetime mental disorders and suicide attempts, and a decrease in income is associated with a higher risk for anxiety, substance use, and mood disorders, according to a new study.

      The connection between poverty and diabetes including obesity and poor diet and sedentary lifestyle from the American Diabetes Association;
      One reason may be that violence tracks with poverty, thereby preventing people from being active out-of-doors. Similarly, parks and sports facilities are less available to people living in poor counties (5), and people who live in poverty-dense regions may be less able to afford gym membership, sports clothing, and/or exercise equipment. There are multiple individual and environmental reasons to explain why poverty-dense counties may be more sedentary and bear greater obesity burdens.

      Environment 

      From the CDC, here is an explanation of the social determinants of health;
      Conditions in the places where people live, learn, work, and play affect a wide range of health risks and outcomes.1 These conditions are known as social determinants of health (SDOH).We know that poverty limits access to healthy foods and safe neighborhoods and that more education is a predictor of better health.2,3,4 We also know that differences in health are striking in communities with poor SDOH such as unstable housing, low income, unsafe neighborhoods, or substandard education.

      ...early-life exposures to nitrogen dioxide (NO2), a marker of traffic-related pollution, and fine particulate matter (PM2.5), a mixture of industrial and other pollutants, are positively associated with subsequent childhood asthma diagnosis...

      From Yale’s School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Scientific American documents numerous particulates of air pollution containing more hazardous ingredients in non-white and low-income communities than in affluent white ones, a new study shows.


      From the Huffington Post, the poor are more likely to experience asthma and other health issues.  


      From the Florida Times Union;
      ...poor black children are more likely than poor white or Hispanic children to be diagnosed with asthma — another ailment that plagues poor children in Jacksonville and one that is linked to living in older, more industrialized areas. Poor white children, though, are more likely to be exposed to secondhand smoke, or to be born to mothers who smoked during pregnancy than poor black or Hispanic children. And poor Hispanic children, it found, are twice as likely to have no place to go for health care, as compared to poor white or black children.



      Ron Finley, guerrilla gardener, TED talk about being arrested for planting a vegetable garden in a poor neighborhood.

       

       


      And Clint Smith, a Washington DC teacher explains in his slam poem the ways that location affects his students.  As you watch, make a list of the ways that location affects them:


      Criminal Justice
      Poor people are more likely to enter the criminal justice system and remain there.



      Loyola's 2022 New Student Convocation featured keynote speaker Reuben Jonathon Miller, Loyola alum, and professor at University of Chicago.  Miller highlighted the many ways that the criminal justice system creates obstacles for those who enter it.  You can read more about Miller's work from NPR here.













      The connection between low income and the criminal justice system has been published about since 1979's The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Prison.

      This is one revelation in William Chambliss's study called "The Saints and the Roughnecks" Chambliss argues that money was a key factor in preventing kids from getting into trouble. If you have enough money it helps you cover up the deviance. Do you think this applies to kids at our school (no names please). Who is deviant? How do they hide it? Does money play a role? Is everyone at school a "saint"? Another important revelation in Chambliss's research is that the kids who accept the label of "deviant" then act upon that label. In other words, if I think that everyone expects me to be deviant, I may accept that as the truth and then I act deviant. Once you are labeled as "deviant", that becomes a stigma or a badge of disgrace that you carry with you. Sociologists who study this perspective call it the labeling theory.




      From Spotlight on Poverty and Georgetown University Law Professor, Peter Edelmen's book, Not A Crime To Be Poor;
      In one of the richest countries on Earth it has effectively become a crime to be poor. For example, in Ferguson, Missouri, the U.S. Department of Justice didn’t just expose racially biased policing; it also exposed exorbitant fines and fees for minor crimes that mainly hit the city’s poor, African American population, resulting in jail by the thousands. As Peter Edelman explains in Not a Crime to Be Poor, in fact Ferguson is everywhere: the debtors’ prisons of the twenty-first century. The anti-tax revolution that began with the Reagan era led state and local governments, starved for revenues, to squeeze ordinary people, collect fines and fees to the tune of 10 million people who now owe $50 billion.

      Nor is the criminalization of poverty confined to money. Schoolchildren are sent to court for playground skirmishes that previously sent them to the principal’s office. Women are evicted from their homes for calling the police too often to ask for protection from domestic violence. The homeless are arrested for sleeping in the park or urinating in public.

      The chart below from the Bureau of Justice Statistics shows the different stages of the criminal justice system. In each stage, a person of lower social class is more likely to progress through the system than a person of upper social class.

      From the Prison Policy Initiative

      Far from offering people a "second chance," our criminal justice system frequently punishes those who never had a first chance: people in poverty. By focusing law enforcement on low-level offenses and subjecting criminal defendants to money bail and other fees, our country effectively punishes people for being poor.

      Poverty is not only a predictor of involvement with the justice system: Too often, it is also the outcome. Criminal punishment subjects people to countless fines, fees, and other costs (often enriching private companies in the process). A criminal record, meanwhile, does lasting collateral damage.

      POVERTY IN OUR JUSTICE SYSTEM IS TOO OFTEN TREATED AS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.  

      Take driver’s licenses for instance: A driver with a busted tail light will be assessed a fine. For many living in poverty, they cannot afford to pay. If left unpaid, most states will eventually suspend the driver’s license.

      Unless the person lives in a city with reliable public transportation, they will have to keep driving to stay employed – putting themselves at higher risk of punishment. Driving on a suspended license leads to additional suspension time and fines, a criminal record, and possible jail time. A simple lack of money can have devastating impacts on one’s livelihood.

      The collateral consequences do not end there. Someone who can’t drive has a hard time staying employed or finding another job. A study in New Jersey showed that 42% of drivers who had suspended licenses lost their jobs and could not readily find another. Eligibility for public housing is restricted or denied if the applicant has a criminal record, including misdemeanors such as driving with a suspended license. Local public housing authorities can be even more restrictive and evict occupants if a member of their family or another person residing in commits a crime, such as a misdemeanor drug offense.

      For someone with low income, having a busted tail light leads to criminal consequences, loss of employment, and even homelessness.
      In the United States, wealth, not culpability, often shapes outcomes. From what is defined as criminal behavior to how penalties are decided, our legal system punishes people who are poor in America far more often and more harshly than the wealthy.

      No person in America should be locked up because they are poor. Yet, every day we see homeless people arrested for sleeping outside; parents who can’t afford to purchase their release from jail; and people who cycle in and out of jail because they can’t afford to pay old fines as their debt grows from new ones. Meanwhile, cities and counties fill their coffers from the fines and fees that are imposed on people who are struggling just to survive. We need a criminal justice system that puts people over profit and helps to make vulnerable people more stable, not less stable.

      Housing and Eviction

      Unhoused Individuals
      One of the groups that is most noticeably affected by low income are people who are unhoused.  In years past, these people were often referred to as "homeless" however in more recent years, "homeless" has taken on negative connotations and there are a number of alternative terms for what used to refer to "homeless".  When speaking directly to someone who might be experiencing this, ask them if they have a term that they prefer and then, more importantly, ask them their name and refer to them by name.  Some other terms that have become common include:
      • unhoused - a common alternative term that avoids the negative sounding suffix "less"
      • houseless - which emphasizes that some people may not live in a house, but wherever they live, they may consider their "home," whether an encampment, shelter, or other place.
      • unsheltered - often used to refer to individuals who have to live in a place that is exposed to the elements such as a bus stop or park, but it does not include those who are living in shelters or other temporary housing.
      • people experiencing homelessness - this phrase is more cumbersome to write but it places the emphasis on the individual's humanity and the temporal nature of their situation as opposed to describing them through a fixed identity based their living situation.
      • homeless people - as an adjective, some writing guides suggest that as an adjective it is an acceptable descriptive term, but "homeless" should not be used as a noun.
      If one of these terms addresses a population that you are trying to speak about specifically, then try to use that word.  


       

      The National Alliance to End Homelessness provides a clickable map that shows the rates of homelessness in each of the 50 states:

      And the site also includes details about subgroups who are living unsheltered:



      Notably, LGBTQ+ individuals are particularly at risk, as are veterans of the US military. The National Network for Youthis dedicated to ending youth homelessness and they report that
      those who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or questioning (LGBTQ+) have a 120% higher risk of experiencing some form of homelessness. With up to 40% of the 4.2 million youth experiencing homelessness identifying as LGBTQ+ while only 9.5% of the U.S. population, LGBTQ+ youth disproportionately experience homelessness compared to their straight and cisgender peers. They are also more likely to experience assault, trauma, depression, and suicide when compared to non-LGBTQ+ populations while also being homeless.

      Housing and living expenses cost more if you are poor, from the ASA's Society Pages
      Social science research demonstrates that the poor pay more for necessities like housing and food, and debt can have serious consequences beyond just financial. The poor pay significantly more for housing than others — sometimes 70% or 80% of their income. In 2018, low-income households paid over half their income for rent or lived in substandard housing. Further, landlords overcharge tenants in high poverty neighborhoods and those with higher concentrations of African Americans relative to the market value of the property. When families cannot afford basic needs they will make calculated tradeoffs to keep their housing, paying for rent instead of utilities to avoid eviction. Such tradeoffs often lead to compounded costs from late fees, and families living without water, electricity, or heat....Poor families tend to pay more for food, too....When poor people face fines and fees, their inability to pay or keep up with payments means they go further into debt. When these fees are part of the criminal justice system, failure to pay can also result in jail time.

      Evicted by Matthew Desmond  

      The award-winning book Evicted from Harvard sociologist Matthew Desmond shows how society profits off the poor and how lack of housing can lead families to spiral downward.

      In this groundbreaking book, Harvard sociologist and 2015 MacArthur “Genius” Award winner Matthew Desmond takes readers into the poorest neighborhoods of Milwaukee, where families spend most of their income on housing and where eviction has become routine—a vicious cycle that deepens our country’s vast inequality. Based on years of embedded fieldwork and painstakingly gathered data, Evicted transforms our understanding of extreme poverty and economic exploitation while providing fresh ideas for solving a devastating, uniquely American problem.

      Mercy Housing provides 6 ways that being poor costs more.


      Poverty and Stigma

      Morality and Health: News Media Constructions of Overweight and Eating Disorders (2010) by Abigail C. Saguy, Kjerstin Gruys Social Problems, Volume 57, Issue 2, 1 May 2010, Pages 231–250.
      From the abstract:
      In the contemporary United States, thinness is associated with high social status and taken as evidence of moral virtue. In contrast, fatness is linked to low status and seen as a sign of sloth and gluttony....news media in our sample typically discuss how a host of complex factors beyond individual control contribute to anorexia and bulimia. In that anorexics and bulimics are typically portrayed as young white women or girls, this reinforces cultural images of young white female victims. In contrast, the media predominantly attribute overweight to bad individual choices and tend to treat binge eating disorder as ordinary and blameworthy overeating. In that the poor and minorities are more likely to be heavy, such reporting reinforces social stereotypes of fat people, ethnic minorities, and the poor as out of control and lazy.



      Other Resources:

      Here is a link to the Stanford Center on Poverty where you can view slides about inequality in the USA.

      Here is a link to 15 statistics about inequality in America.

      Here is a an article from the Washington Post explaining the difficulty of defining the middle class.

      Different types of poverty (suburban, urban, rural/climate-caused, ):
      The Line, MediaEd documentary (2015) 48 minutes
      Documentary about the varied types of people living at the poverty line.  The first two are from Chicagoland.  One is a white suburban Dad who lives in the western suburbs.  The next is a black woman living in the city who moves to Oak Park.  

      Children in poverty:
      Poor Kids, Frontline documentary (2017).  54 minutes online at PBS.
      Twenty percent of the children in the US are growing up in poverty! That's 1 out of every 5 kids in the United States is living at the poverty level! Yes, you read that correctly - 1 out of every 5 children in the United States is living in poverty right now!  That's a higher rate than 34 out of 35 Western countries.  
      Here is an update from 2019 about how the families are doing 2 years after the end of the movie.

      Rural poverty:
      Children of the Mountain (2009), 49 minutes.
      Diane Sawyer did a special report on Appalachia that highlighted the children affected by poverty. I think there is a tendency for us to blame the adults for their impoverished situation, but we forget that these adults were once children born into a world of difficulties and obstacles that led to an adulthood of poverty. You can hear Diane Sawyer talk about it here. Can you use your sociological imagination to see all of the social forces that limit those who are in poverty in America? Watch the excerpt below from 20/20 to see the complicated life of the rural impoverished American: