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Race on the Brain

What Implicit Bias Gets Wrong About the Struggle for Racial Justice

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Of the many obstacles to racial justice in America, none has received more recent attention than the one that lurks in our subconscious. As social movements and policing scandals have shown how far from being "postracial" we are, the concept of implicit bias has taken center stage in the national conversation about race. Millions of Americans have taken online tests purporting to show the deep, invisible roots of their own prejudice. A recent Oxford study that claims to have found a drug that reduces implicit bias is only the starkest example of a pervasive trend. But what do we risk when we seek the simplicity of a technological diagnosis—and solution—for racism? What do we miss when we locate racism in our biology and our brains rather than in our history and our social practices?
In Race on the Brain, Jonathan Kahn argues that implicit bias has grown into a master narrative of race relations—one with profound, if unintended, negative consequences for law, science, and society. He emphasizes its limitations, arguing that while useful as a tool to understand particular types of behavior, it is only one among several tools available to policy makers. An uncritical embrace of implicit bias, to the exclusion of power relations and structural racism, undermines wider civic responsibility for addressing the problem by turning it over to experts. Technological interventions, including many tests for implicit bias, are premised on a color-blind ideal and run the risk of erasing history, denying present reality, and obscuring accountability. Kahn recognizes the significance of implicit social cognition but cautions against seeing it as a panacea for addressing America's longstanding racial problems. A bracing corrective to what has become a common-sense understanding of the power of prejudice, Race on the Brain challenges us all to engage more thoughtfully and more democratically in the difficult task of promoting racial justice.

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    • Library Journal

      Starred review from November 15, 2017

      To identify and address America's persistent racial inequality and injustice, we must first reconsider how we understand racism and how it affects our actions, argues Kahn (Mitchell Hamline Univ. Sch. of Law; Race in a Bottle). In nine chapters, an introduction, and a conclusion, the author emphasizes how contemporary American society thinks and talks about racism, deploying legal and scientific technologies to address racism, and create context for progress on racial justice. Focusing particularly on the concept of "implicit bias," which has become central to how law, science, and society have come to treat the nature of racism, Kahn offers detailed correctives. He explains the rising notion that pervasive biases and negative associations that constitute racism reside outside the realm of personal awareness and foster a denial of history. He also shows that "implicit social cognition" mistakenly suggests there is an easy way to fight racism. VERDICT Kahn's important and masterly work deserves close reading and broad discussion among practitioners and students of law and public policy, but even more so among those interested in promoting racial justice.--Thomas J. Davis, Arizona State Univ., Tempe

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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