Thursday, June 24, 2021

Problematizing Race as a Variable

Society is abuzz these days with concepts like DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) and now JEDI (Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion), for the DEI Star Wars fans. I hear them flowing from the mouths of executives, politicians, grant-making agencies, and higher education folks. You would think that as a race researcher, I would be over the moon to see so many picking up the mantle of DEI. However, I grow more concerned as I notice that within this flurry, those same people aren’t addressing systemic racism and certainly not white supremacism.

When we see this in research—when researchers treat race only as a variable—it’s troubling. Amidst the DEI movement, I’ve seen calls to consider diversity and inclusion in proposals sent to major grant-making agencies like the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Science Foundation (NSF). Researchers, eager to acquiesce, respond by seeking a racial diversity of participants and reporting results based on race.

Too often, that’s where it ends. In 2012, renowned higher education researcher Dr. Shaun Harper published an article entitled, “Race Without Racism.” In it, he critiques higher education research publications that focus on race and racial disparities, but do not address racism. He argues, “In order to get beyond persistent racial disparities and to realize the vision for a version of American higher education that is truly equitable and inclusive, we must first take account of racism and its harmful effects on people in postsecondary contexts.”

Harper notes that a focus on race without a consideration of racism allows for an analysis that casts Black, Indigenous, & People of Color (BIPOC) in a deficit light. This situates BIPOC people as a problem needing to be fixed or helped. As anthropology scholar Dr. Bianca Williams said, “I don’t have a problem because I’m Black, I have a problem because you’re racist.” Applying a deficit lens to BIPOC people ignores the root of the “problem” being examined, blames the victim, and avoids the oppressor and oppressive system.

Beyond the deficit lens, there is a more insidious trend in research that is particularly notable in the health sciences: the connotation of race as inherent or biological.

Some background: Race is a hierarchical social construction created by and for those who considered themselves White. Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus was one of the first Europeans to classify people by what we now know as race. Linnaeus took a break from his work of classifying plant life and decided to try his hand at people. His classifications included skin color and a host of negative character attributes for those who were not European or white.

The concept of race evolved thanks to the European settlers colonizing the U.S. who wanted to assert their self-bestowed superiority and justify heinous and genocidal systems, such as the enslavement of Africans and stealing land from Indigenous people.

In her 2006 book, Medical Apartheid, Harriet A. Washington describes how the U.S.’s history of medical research and aligned pseudoscience (particularly that of Eugenics) led to the violent dehumanization of Black people, in particular. She describes the vital role medical and health research has played in upholding white supremacism in its work to “prove” the superiority of the White race.

While most health researchers have disavowed such work and its explicit racism, frightening statistics from the last decade like that of Hoffman et al (2016) show that not just white people, but a substantial portion of white medical students and physicians, believe that race is biological. In one example, 58% of white participants in the Hoffman study thought that Black people’s skin was thicker than white people’s skin. Twenty-five percent of white medical residents concurred.

This brings me to my point and my concern. Race as a concept was created, developed, and promoted to uphold White supremacy in all of our systems, including education, the law, technology, and healthcare. When researchers and the general public try to analyze and interpret research results that include race as a variable, but do not account for racism, assumptions of race as biological are not only possible, but probable.

As a remedy, researchers can begin to combat this trend by simply asking of their results: How is racism at play? Do not ask what’s wrong with Black, Brown, and Indigenous people that they score lower on standardized tests, have worse health outcomes, or are arrested and incarcerated more. Ask how racism is working in this system to disenfranchise and oppress the BIPOC groups to the point that they are experiencing these disparities. It is in this acknowledgement and action that we can genuinely make strides to combat inequity.

I am not calling for the removal of race, even as a variable, from research. I’m calling on researchers to also include considerations of racism in their research to resist a deficit lens and the association of race with human biology.

According to the Oxford definition, a Jedi is “trained to guard peace and justice in the Universe.” As researchers, the first step in our JEDI training is to understand how the dark forces of racism are at work, including within our own research.

Resources:

Problematizing Race as a Variable e-Seminar - ORDE 

Harper, S.R. (2012). Race without Racism: How HigherEducation Researchers Minimize Racist Institutional Norms. The Review of HigherEducation 36(1), 9-29. doi:10.1353/rhe.2012.0047.

Hoffman, K. M., Trawalter, S., Axt, J. R., & Oliver, M. N. (2016). Racial bias in pain assessment and treatment recommendations, and false beliefs about biological differences between blacks and whites. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 113, 4296-4301. doi:10.1073/pnas.1516047113.

Javier Perez-Rodriguez & Alejandro de la Fuente (2017) Now is the Time for a Postracial Medicine: Biomedical Research, the National Institutes of Health, and the Perpetuation of Scientific Racism, The American Journal of Bioethics, 17:9, 36-47, DOI: 10.1080/15265161.2017.1353165


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