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Wikipedia

Racism

Racism is the belief that groups of humans possess different behavioral traits corresponding to inherited attributes and can be divided based on the superiority of one race over another.[1][2][3] It may also mean prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against other people because they are of a different race or ethnicity.[2] Modern variants of racism are often based in social perceptions of biological differences between peoples. These views can take the form of social actions, practices or beliefs, or political systems in which different races are ranked as inherently superior or inferior to each other, based on presumed shared inheritable traits, abilities, or qualities.[2][3] There have been attempts to legitimize racist beliefs through scientific means, such as scientific racism, which have been overwhelmingly shown to be unfounded. In terms of political systems (e.g. apartheid) that support the expression of prejudice or aversion in discriminatory practices or laws, racist ideology may include associated social aspects such as nativism, xenophobia, otherness, segregation, hierarchical ranking, and supremacism.

While the concepts of race and ethnicity are considered to be separate in contemporary social science, the two terms have a long history of equivalence in popular usage and older social science literature. "Ethnicity" is often used in a sense close to one traditionally attributed to "race", the division of human groups based on qualities assumed to be essential or innate to the group (e.g. shared ancestry or shared behavior). Racism and racial discrimination are often used to describe discrimination on an ethnic or cultural basis, independent of whether these differences are described as racial. According to the United Nations's Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, there is no distinction between the terms "racial" and "ethnic" discrimination. It further concludes that superiority based on racial differentiation is scientifically false, morally condemnable, socially unjust, and dangerous. The convention also declared that there is no justification for racial discrimination, anywhere, in theory or in practice.[4]

Racism is a relatively modern concept, arising in the European age of imperialism, the subsequent growth of capitalism, and especially the Atlantic slave trade,[1][5] of which it was a major driving force.[6] It was also a major force behind racial segregation in the United States in the 19th and early 20th centuries, and of apartheid in South Africa; 19th and 20th-century racism in Western culture is particularly well documented and constitutes a reference point in studies and discourses about racism.[7] Racism has played a role in genocides such as the Holocaust, the Armenian genocide, the Rwandan genocide, and the Genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia, as well as colonial projects including the European colonization of the Americas, Africa, Asia, and the population transfer in the Soviet Union including deportations of indigenous minorities.[8] Indigenous peoples have been—and are—often subject to racist attitudes.

Etymology, definition, and usage

 
An early use of the word racism by Richard Henry Pratt in 1902: "Association of races and classes is necessary to destroy racism and classism."

In the 19th century, many scientists subscribed to the belief that the human population can be divided into races. The term racism is a noun describing the state of being racist, i.e., subscribing to the belief that the human population can or should be classified into races with differential abilities and dispositions, which in turn may motivate a political ideology in which rights and privileges are differentially distributed based on racial categories. The term "racist" may be an adjective or a noun, the latter describing a person who holds those beliefs.[9] The origin of the root word "race" is not clear. Linguists generally agree that it came to the English language from Middle French, but there is no such agreement on how it generally came into Latin-based languages. A recent proposal is that it derives from the Arabic ra's, which means "head, beginning, origin" or the Hebrew rosh, which has a similar meaning.[10] Early race theorists generally held the view that some races were inferior to others and they consequently believed that the differential treatment of races was fully justified.[11][12][13] These early theories guided pseudo-scientific research assumptions; the collective endeavors to adequately define and form hypotheses about racial differences are generally termed scientific racism, though this term is a misnomer, due to the lack of any actual science backing the claims.

Most biologists, anthropologists, and sociologists reject a taxonomy of races in favor of more specific and/or empirically verifiable criteria, such as geography, ethnicity, or a history of endogamy.[14] Human genome research indicates that race is not a meaningful genetic classification of humans.[15][16][17][18]

An entry in the Oxford English Dictionary (2008) defines racialism as "[a]n earlier term than racism, but now largely superseded by it", and cites the term "racialism" in a 1902 quote.[19] The revised Oxford English Dictionary cites the shorter term "racism" in a quote from the year 1903.[20] It was defined by the Oxford English Dictionary (2nd edition 1989) as "[t]he theory that distinctive human characteristics and abilities are determined by race"; the same dictionary termed racism a synonym of racialism: "belief in the superiority of a particular race". By the end of World War II, racism had acquired the same supremacist connotations formerly associated with racialism: racism by then implied racial discrimination, racial supremacism, and a harmful intent. The term "race hatred" had also been used by sociologist Frederick Hertz in the late 1920s.

As its history indicates, the popular use of the word racism is relatively recent. The word came into widespread usage in the Western world in the 1930s, when it was used to describe the social and political ideology of Nazism, which treated "race" as a naturally given political unit.[21] It is commonly agreed that racism existed before the coinage of the word, but there is not a wide agreement on a single definition of what racism is and what it is not.[11] Today, some scholars of racism prefer to use the concept in the plural racisms, in order to emphasize its many different forms that do not easily fall under a single definition. They also argue that different forms of racism have characterized different historical periods and geographical areas.[22] Garner (2009: p. 11) summarizes different existing definitions of racism and identifies three common elements contained in those definitions of racism. First, a historical, hierarchical power relationship between groups; second, a set of ideas (an ideology) about racial differences; and, third, discriminatory actions (practices).[11]

Legal

Though many countries around the globe have passed laws related to race and discrimination, the first significant international human rights instrument developed by the United Nations (UN) was the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR),[23] which was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948. The UDHR recognizes that if people are to be treated with dignity, they require economic rights, social rights including education, and the rights to cultural and political participation and civil liberty. It further states that everyone is entitled to these rights "without distinction of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status".

The UN does not define "racism"; however, it does define "racial discrimination". According to the 1965 UN International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,[24]

The term "racial discrimination" shall mean any distinction, exclusion, restriction, or preference based on race, colour, descent, or national or ethnic origin that has the purpose or effect of nullifying or impairing the recognition, enjoyment or exercise, on an equal footing, of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural or any other field of public life.

In their 1978 United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Declaration on Race and Racial Prejudice (Article 1), the UN states, "All human beings belong to a single species and are descended from a common stock. They are born equal in dignity and rights and all form an integral part of humanity."[25]

The UN definition of racial discrimination does not make any distinction between discrimination based on ethnicity and race, in part because the distinction between the two has been a matter of debate among academics, including anthropologists.[26] Similarly, in British law, the phrase racial group means "any group of people who are defined by reference to their race, colour, nationality (including citizenship) or ethnic or national origin".[27]

In Norway, the word "race" has been removed from national laws concerning discrimination because the use of the phrase is considered problematic and unethical.[28][29] The Norwegian Anti-Discrimination Act bans discrimination based on ethnicity, national origin, descent, and skin color.[30]

Social and behavioral sciences

Sociologists, in general, recognize "race" as a social construct. This means that, although the concepts of race and racism are based on observable biological characteristics, any conclusions drawn about race on the basis of those observations are heavily influenced by cultural ideologies. Racism, as an ideology, exists in a society at both the individual and institutional level.

While much of the research and work on racism during the last half-century or so has concentrated on "white racism" in the Western world, historical accounts of race-based social practices can be found across the globe.[31] Thus, racism can be broadly defined to encompass individual and group prejudices and acts of discrimination that result in material and cultural advantages conferred on a majority or a dominant social group.[32] So-called "white racism" focuses on societies in which white populations are the majority or the dominant social group. In studies of these majority white societies, the aggregate of material and cultural advantages is usually termed "white privilege".

Race and race relations are prominent areas of study in sociology and economics. Much of the sociological literature focuses on white racism. Some of the earliest sociological works on racism were penned by sociologist W. E. B. Du Bois, the first African American to earn a doctoral degree from Harvard University. Du Bois wrote, "[t]he problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color line."[33] Wellman (1993) defines racism as "culturally sanctioned beliefs, which, regardless of intentions involved, defend the advantages whites have because of the subordinated position of racial minorities".[34] In both sociology and economics, the outcomes of racist actions are often measured by the inequality in income, wealth, net worth, and access to other cultural resources (such as education), between racial groups.[35]

In sociology and social psychology, racial identity and the acquisition of that identity, is often used as a variable in racism studies. Racial ideologies and racial identity affect individuals' perception of race and discrimination. Cazenave and Maddern (1999) define racism as "a highly organized system of 'race'-based group privilege that operates at every level of society and is held together by a sophisticated ideology of color/'race' supremacy. Racial centrality (the extent to which a culture recognizes individuals' racial identity) appears to affect the degree of discrimination African-American young adults perceive whereas racial ideology may buffer the detrimental emotional effects of that discrimination."[36] Sellers and Shelton (2003) found that a relationship between racial discrimination and emotional distress was moderated by racial ideology and social beliefs.[37]

Some sociologists also argue that, particularly in the West, where racism is often negatively sanctioned in society, racism has changed from being a blatant to a more covert expression of racial prejudice. The "newer" (more hidden and less easily detectable) forms of racism—which can be considered embedded in social processes and structures—are more difficult to explore and challenge. It has been suggested that, while in many countries overt or explicit racism has become increasingly taboo, even among those who display egalitarian explicit attitudes, an implicit or aversive racism is still maintained subconsciously.[38]

This process has been studied extensively in social psychology as implicit associations and implicit attitudes, a component of implicit cognition. Implicit attitudes are evaluations that occur without conscious awareness towards an attitude object or the self. These evaluations are generally either favorable or unfavorable. They come about from various influences in the individual experience.[39] Implicit attitudes are not consciously identified (or they are inaccurately identified) traces of past experience that mediate favorable or unfavorable feelings, thoughts, or actions towards social objects.[38] These feelings, thoughts, or actions have an influence on behavior of which the individual may not be aware.[40]

Therefore, subconscious racism can influence our visual processing and how our minds work when we are subliminally exposed to faces of different colors. In thinking about crime, for example, social psychologist Jennifer L. Eberhardt (2004) of Stanford University holds that, "blackness is so associated with crime you're ready to pick out these crime objects."[41] Such exposures influence our minds and they can cause subconscious racism in our behavior towards other people or even towards objects. Thus, racist thoughts and actions can arise from stereotypes and fears of which we are not aware.[42] For example, scientists and activists have warned that the use of the stereotype "Nigerian Prince" for referring to advance-fee scammers is racist, i.e. "reducing Nigeria to a nation of scammers and fraudulent princes, as some people still do online, is a stereotype that needs to be called out".[43]

Humanities

Language, linguistics, and discourse are active areas of study in the humanities, along with literature and the arts. Discourse analysis seeks to reveal the meaning of race and the actions of racists through careful study of the ways in which these factors of human society are described and discussed in various written and oral works. For example, Van Dijk (1992) examines the different ways in which descriptions of racism and racist actions are depicted by the perpetrators of such actions as well as by their victims.[44] He notes that when descriptions of actions have negative implications for the majority, and especially for white elites, they are often seen as controversial and such controversial interpretations are typically marked with quotation marks or they are greeted with expressions of distance or doubt. The previously cited book, The Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B. Du Bois, represents early African-American literature that describes the author's experiences with racism when he was traveling in the South as an African American.

Much American fictional literature has focused on issues of racism and the black "racial experience" in the US, including works written by whites, such as Uncle Tom's Cabin, To Kill a Mockingbird, and Imitation of Life, or even the non-fiction work Black Like Me. These books, and others like them, feed into what has been called the "white savior narrative in film", in which the heroes and heroines are white even though the story is about things that happen to black characters. Textual analysis of such writings can contrast sharply with black authors' descriptions of African Americans and their experiences in US society. African-American writers have sometimes been portrayed in African-American studies as retreating from racial issues when they write about "whiteness", while others identify this as an African-American literary tradition called "the literature of white estrangement", part of a multi-pronged effort to challenge and dismantle white supremacy in the US.[45]

Popular usage

According to dictionaries, the word is commonly used to describe prejudice and discrimination based on race.[46][47]

Racism can also be said to describe a condition in society in which a dominant racial group benefits from the oppression of others, whether that group wants such benefits or not.[48] Foucauldian scholar Ladelle McWhorter, in her 2009 book, Racism and Sexual Oppression in Anglo-America: A Genealogy, posits modern racism similarly, focusing on the notion of a dominant group, usually whites, vying for racial purity and progress, rather than an overt or obvious ideology focused on the oppression of nonwhites.[49]

In popular usage, as in some academic usage, little distinction is made between "racism" and "ethnocentrism". Often, the two are listed together as "racial and ethnic" in describing some action or outcome that is associated with prejudice within a majority or dominant group in society. Furthermore, the meaning of the term racism is often conflated with the terms prejudice, bigotry, and discrimination. Racism is a complex concept that can involve each of those; but it cannot be equated with, nor is it synonymous, with these other terms.[citation needed]

The term is often used in relation to what is seen as prejudice within a minority or subjugated group, as in the concept of reverse racism. "Reverse racism" is a concept often used to describe acts of discrimination or hostility against members of a dominant racial or ethnic group while favoring members of minority groups.[50][51] This concept has been used especially in the United States in debates over color-conscious policies (such as affirmative action) intended to remedy racial inequalities.[52] However, many experts and other commenters view reverse racism as a myth rather than a reality.[53][54][55][56] Scholars commonly define racism not only in terms of individual prejudice, but also in terms of a power structure that protects the interests of the dominant culture and actively discriminates against ethnic minorities.[50][51] From this perspective, while members of ethnic minorities may be prejudiced against members of the dominant culture, they lack the political and economic power to actively oppress them, and they are therefore not practicing "racism".[1][50][57]

Aspects

The ideology underlying racism can manifest in many aspects of social life. Such aspects are described in this section, although the list is not exhaustive.

Aversive racism

Aversive racism is a form of implicit racism, in which a person's unconscious negative evaluations of racial or ethnic minorities are realized by a persistent avoidance of interaction with other racial and ethnic groups. As opposed to traditional, overt racism, which is characterized by overt hatred for and explicit discrimination against racial/ethnic minorities, aversive racism is characterized by more complex, ambivalent expressions and attitudes.[58] Aversive racism is similar in implications to the concept of symbolic or modern racism (described below), which is also a form of implicit, unconscious, or covert attitude which results in unconscious forms of discrimination.

The term was coined by Joel Kovel to describe the subtle racial behaviors of any ethnic or racial group who rationalize their aversion to a particular group by appeal to rules or stereotypes.[58] People who behave in an aversively racial way may profess egalitarian beliefs, and will often deny their racially motivated behavior; nevertheless they change their behavior when dealing with a member of another race or ethnic group than the one they belong to. The motivation for the change is thought to be implicit or subconscious. Experiments have provided empirical support for the existence of aversive racism. Aversive racism has been shown to have potentially serious implications for decision making in employment, in legal decisions and in helping behavior.[59][60]

Color blindness

In relation to racism, color blindness is the disregard of racial characteristics in social interaction, for example in the rejection of affirmative action, as a way to address the results of past patterns of discrimination. Critics of this attitude argue that by refusing to attend to racial disparities, racial color blindness in fact unconsciously perpetuates the patterns that produce racial inequality.[61]

Eduardo Bonilla-Silva argues that color blind racism arises from an "abstract liberalism, biologization of culture, naturalization of racial matters, and minimization of racism".[62] Color blind practices are "subtle, institutional, and apparently nonracial"[63] because race is explicitly ignored in decision-making. If race is disregarded in predominantly white populations, for example, whiteness becomes the normative standard, whereas people of color are othered, and the racism these individuals experience may be minimized or erased.[64][65] At an individual level, people with "color blind prejudice" reject racist ideology, but also reject systemic policies intended to fix institutional racism.[65]

Cultural

Cultural racism manifests as societal beliefs and customs that promote the assumption that the products of a given culture, including the language and traditions of that culture, are superior to those of other cultures. It shares a great deal with xenophobia, which is often characterized by fear of, or aggression toward, members of an outgroup by members of an ingroup.[citation needed] In that sense it is also similar to communalism as used in South Asia.[66]

Cultural racism exists when there is a widespread acceptance of stereotypes concerning diverse ethnic or population groups.[67] Whereas racism can be characterised by the belief that one race is inherently superior to another, cultural racism can be characterised by the belief that one culture is inherently superior to another.[68]

Economic

Historical economic or social disparity is alleged to be a form of discrimination caused by past racism and historical reasons, affecting the present generation through deficits in the formal education and kinds of preparation in previous generations, and through primarily unconscious racist attitudes and actions on members of the general population. Economic discrimination may lead to choices that perpetuate racism. For example, color photographic film was tuned for white skin[69] as are automatic soap dispensers[70] and facial recognition systems.[71]

In 2011, Bank of America agreed to pay $335 million to settle a federal government claim that its mortgage division, Countrywide Financial, discriminated against black and Hispanic homebuyers.[72]

Institutional

 
African-American university student Vivian Malone entering the University of Alabama in the U.S. to register for classes as one of the first African-American students to attend the institution. Until 1963, the university was racially segregated and African-American students were not allowed to attend.

Institutional racism (also known as structural racism, state racism or systemic racism) is racial discrimination by governments, corporations, religions, or educational institutions or other large organizations with the power to influence the lives of many individuals. Stokely Carmichael is credited for coining the phrase institutional racism in the late 1960s. He defined the term as "the collective failure of an organization to provide an appropriate and professional service to people because of their colour, culture or ethnic origin".[73]

Maulana Karenga argued that racism constituted the destruction of culture, language, religion, and human possibility and that the effects of racism were "the morally monstrous destruction of human possibility involved redefining African humanity to the world, poisoning past, present and future relations with others who only know us through this stereotyping and thus damaging the truly human relations among peoples".[74]

Othering

Othering is the term used by some to describe a system of discrimination whereby the characteristics of a group are used to distinguish them as separate from the norm.[75]

Othering plays a fundamental role in the history and continuation of racism. To objectify a culture as something different, exotic or underdeveloped is to generalize that it is not like 'normal' society. Europe's colonial attitude towards the Orientals exemplifies this as it was thought that the East was the opposite of the West; feminine where the West was masculine, weak where the West was strong and traditional where the West was progressive.[76] By making these generalizations and othering the East, Europe was simultaneously defining herself as the norm, further entrenching the gap.[77]

Much of the process of othering relies on imagined difference, or the expectation of difference. Spatial difference can be enough to conclude that "we" are "here" and the "others" are over "there".[76] Imagined differences serve to categorize people into groups and assign them characteristics that suit the imaginer's expectations.[78]

Racial discrimination

Racial discrimination refers to discrimination against someone on the basis of their race.

Racial segregation

External video
  James A. White Sr.: The little problem I had renting a house, TED Talks, 14:20, February 20, 2015

Racial segregation is the separation of humans into socially-constructed racial groups in daily life. It may apply to activities such as eating in a restaurant, drinking from a water fountain, using a bathroom, attending school, going to the movies, or in the rental or purchase of a home.[79] Segregation is generally outlawed, but may exist through social norms, even when there is no strong individual preference for it, as suggested by Thomas Schelling's models of segregation and subsequent work.

Supremacism

 
In 1899 Uncle Sam (a personification of the United States) balances his new possessions which are depicted as savage children. The figures are Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Cuba, Philippines and "Ladrones" (the Mariana Islands).

Centuries of European colonialism in the Americas, Africa and Asia were often justified by white supremacist attitudes.[80] During the early 20th century, the phrase "The White Man's Burden" was widely used to justify an imperialist policy as a noble enterprise.[81][82] A justification for the policy of conquest and subjugation of Native Americans emanated from the stereotyped perceptions of the indigenous people as "merciless Indian savages", as they are described in the United States Declaration of Independence.[83] Sam Wolfson of The Guardian writes that "the declaration's passage has often been cited as an encapsulation of the dehumanizing attitude toward indigenous Americans that the US was founded on."[84] In an 1890 article about colonial expansion onto Native American land, author L. Frank Baum wrote: "The Whites, by law of conquest, by justice of civilization, are masters of the American continent, and the best safety of the frontier settlements will be secured by the total annihilation of the few remaining Indians."[85] In his Notes on the State of Virginia, published in 1785, Thomas Jefferson wrote: "blacks, whether originally a distinct race, or made distinct by time or circumstances, are inferior to the whites in the endowments of both body and mind."[86] Attitudes of black supremacy, Arab supremacy, and East Asian supremacy also exist.

Symbolic/modern

 
A rally against school integration in Little Rock, Arkansas, 1959

Some scholars argue that in the US, earlier violent and aggressive forms of racism have evolved into a more subtle form of prejudice in the late 20th century. This new form of racism is sometimes referred to as "modern racism" and it is characterized by outwardly acting unprejudiced while inwardly maintaining prejudiced attitudes, displaying subtle prejudiced behaviors such as actions informed by attributing qualities to others based on racial stereotypes, and evaluating the same behavior differently based on the race of the person being evaluated.[87] This view is based on studies of prejudice and discriminatory behavior, where some people will act ambivalently towards black people, with positive reactions in certain, more public contexts, but more negative views and expressions in more private contexts. This ambivalence may also be visible for example in hiring decisions where job candidates that are otherwise positively evaluated may be unconsciously disfavored by employers in the final decision because of their race.[88][89][90] Some scholars consider modern racism to be characterized by an explicit rejection of stereotypes, combined with resistance to changing structures of discrimination for reasons that are ostensibly non-racial, an ideology that considers opportunity at a purely individual basis denying the relevance of race in determining individual opportunities and the exhibition of indirect forms of micro-aggression toward and/or avoidance of people of other races.[91]

Subconscious biases

Recent research has shown that individuals who consciously claim to reject racism may still exhibit race-based subconscious biases in their decision-making processes. While such "subconscious racial biases" do not fully fit the definition of racism, their impact can be similar, though typically less pronounced, not being explicit, conscious or deliberate.[92]

International law and racial discrimination

In 1919, a proposal to include a racial equality provision in the Covenant of the League of Nations was supported by a majority, but not adopted in the Paris Peace Conference in 1919. In 1943, Japan and its allies declared work for the abolition of racial discrimination to be their aim at the Greater East Asia Conference.[93] Article 1 of the 1945 UN Charter includes "promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race" as UN purpose.

In 1950, UNESCO suggested in The Race Question—a statement signed by 21 scholars such as Ashley Montagu, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Gunnar Myrdal, Julian Huxley, etc.—to "drop the term race altogether and instead speak of ethnic groups". The statement condemned scientific racism theories that had played a role in the Holocaust. It aimed both at debunking scientific racist theories, by popularizing modern knowledge concerning "the race question", and morally condemned racism as contrary to the philosophy of the Enlightenment and its assumption of equal rights for all. Along with Myrdal's An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy (1944), The Race Question influenced the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court desegregation decision in Brown v. Board of Education.[94] Also, in 1950, the European Convention on Human Rights was adopted, which was widely used on racial discrimination issues.[95]

The United Nations use the definition of racial discrimination laid out in the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, adopted in 1966:[96]

... any distinction, exclusion, restriction or preference based on race, color, descent, or national or ethnic origin that has the purpose or effect of nullifying or impairing the recognition, enjoyment or exercise, on an equal footing, of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural or any other field of public life. (Part 1 of Article 1 of the U.N. International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination)

In 2001, the European Union explicitly banned racism, along with many other forms of social discrimination, in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, the legal effect of which, if any, would necessarily be limited to Institutions of the European Union: "Article 21 of the charter prohibits discrimination on any ground such as race, color, ethnic or social origin, genetic features, language, religion or belief, political or any other opinion, membership of a national minority, property, disability, age or sexual orientation and also discrimination on the grounds of nationality."[97]

Ideology

 
A pro–Hiester Clymer racist political campaign poster from the 1866 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election

Racism existed during the 19th century as "scientific racism", which attempted to provide a racial classification of humanity.[98] In 1775 Johann Blumenbach divided the world's population into five groups according to skin color (Caucasians, Mongols, etc.), positing the view that the non-Caucasians had arisen through a process of degeneration. Another early view in scientific racism was the polygenist view, which held that the different races had been separately created. Polygenist Christoph Meiners for example, split mankind into two divisions which he labeled the "beautiful White race" and the "ugly Black race". In Meiners' book, The Outline of History of Mankind, he claimed that a main characteristic of race is either beauty or ugliness. He viewed only the white race as beautiful. He considered ugly races to be inferior, immoral and animal-like.

Anders Retzius demonstrated that neither Europeans nor others are one "pure race", but of mixed origins. While discredited, derivations of Blumenbach's taxonomy are still widely used for the classification of the population in the United States. Hans Peder Steensby, while strongly emphasizing that all humans today are of mixed origins, in 1907 claimed that the origins of human differences must be traced extraordinarily far back in time, and conjectured that the "purest race" today would be the Australian Aboriginals.[99]

 
A sign on a racially segregated beach during Apartheid in South Africa, stating that the area is for the "sole use of members of the white race group"

Scientific racism fell strongly out of favor in the early 20th century, but the origins of fundamental human and societal differences are still researched within academia, in fields such as human genetics including paleogenetics, social anthropology, comparative politics, history of religions, history of ideas, prehistory, history, ethics, and psychiatry. There is widespread rejection of any methodology based on anything similar to Blumenbach's races. It is more unclear to which extent and when ethnic and national stereotypes are accepted.

Although after World War II and the Holocaust, racist ideologies were discredited on ethical, political and scientific grounds, racism and racial discrimination have remained widespread around the world.

Du Bois observed that it is not so much "race" that we think about, but culture: "... a common history, common laws and religion, similar habits of thought and a conscious striving together for certain ideals of life".[100] Late 19th century nationalists were the first to embrace contemporary discourses on "race", ethnicity, and "survival of the fittest" to shape new nationalist doctrines. Ultimately, race came to represent not only the most important traits of the human body, but was also regarded as decisively shaping the character and personality of the nation.[101] According to this view, culture is the physical manifestation created by ethnic groupings, as such fully determined by racial characteristics. Culture and race became considered intertwined and dependent upon each other, sometimes even to the extent of including nationality or language to the set of definition. Pureness of race tended to be related to rather superficial characteristics that were easily addressed and advertised, such as blondness. Racial qualities tended to be related to nationality and language rather than the actual geographic distribution of racial characteristics. In the case of Nordicism, the denomination "Germanic" was equivalent to superiority of race.

Bolstered by some nationalist and ethnocentric values and achievements of choice, this concept of racial superiority evolved to distinguish from other cultures that were considered inferior or impure. This emphasis on culture corresponds to the modern mainstream definition of racism: "[r]acism does not originate from the existence of 'races'. It creates them through a process of social division into categories: anybody can be racialised, independently of their somatic, cultural, religious differences."[102]

This definition explicitly ignores the biological concept of race, which is still subject to scientific debate. In the words of David C. Rowe, "[a] racial concept, although sometimes in the guise of another name, will remain in use in biology and in other fields because scientists, as well as lay persons, are fascinated by human diversity, some of which is captured by race."[103]

Racial prejudice became subject to international legislation. For instance, the Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on November 20, 1963, addresses racial prejudice explicitly next to discrimination for reasons of race, colour or ethnic origin (Article I).[104]

Ethnicity and ethnic conflicts

 
A mass grave being dug for frozen bodies from the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre, in which the U.S. Army killed 150 Lakota people, marking the end of the American Indian Wars

Debates over the origins of racism often suffer from a lack of clarity over the term. Many use the term "racism" to refer to more general phenomena, such as xenophobia and ethnocentrism, although scholars attempt to clearly distinguish those phenomena from racism as an ideology or from scientific racism, which has little to do with ordinary xenophobia. Others conflate recent forms of racism with earlier forms of ethnic and national conflict. In most cases, ethno-national conflict seems to owe itself to conflict over land and strategic resources. In some cases, ethnicity and nationalism were harnessed in order to rally combatants in wars between great religious empires (for example, the Muslim Turks and the Catholic Austro-Hungarians).

Notions of race and racism have often played central roles in ethnic conflicts. Throughout history, when an adversary is identified as "other" based on notions of race or ethnicity (in particular when "other" is interpreted to mean "inferior"), the means employed by the self-presumed "superior" party to appropriate territory, human chattel, or material wealth often have been more ruthless, more brutal, and less constrained by moral or ethical considerations. According to historian Daniel Richter, Pontiac's Rebellion saw the emergence on both sides of the conflict of "the novel idea that all Native people were 'Indians,' that all Euro-Americans were 'Whites,' and that all on one side must unite to destroy the other".[105] Basil Davidson states in his documentary, Africa: Different but Equal, that racism, in fact, only just recently surfaced as late as the 19th century, due to the need for a justification for slavery in the Americas.

Historically, racism was a major driving force behind the Transatlantic slave trade.[106] It was also a major force behind racial segregation, especially in the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and South Africa under apartheid; 19th and 20th century racism in the Western world is particularly well documented and constitutes a reference point in studies and discourses about racism.[7] Racism has played a role in genocides such as the Armenian genocide, and the Holocaust, and colonial projects like the European colonization of the Americas, Africa, and Asia. Indigenous peoples have been—and are—often subject to racist attitudes. Practices and ideologies of racism are condemned by the United Nations in the Declaration of Human Rights.[107]

Ethnic and racial nationalism

 
A 1917 anti-conscription propaganda leaflet imploring voters to "keep Australia white". A horde of Asians bearing a dragon flag is shown to the north.

After the Napoleonic Wars, Europe was confronted with the new "nationalities question", leading to reconfigurations of the European map, on which the frontiers between the states had been delineated during the 1648 Peace of Westphalia. Nationalism had made its first appearance with the invention of the levée en masse by the French Revolutionaries, thus inventing mass conscription in order to be able to defend the newly founded Republic against the Ancien Régime order represented by the European monarchies. This led to the French Revolutionary Wars (1792–1802) and then to the conquests of Napoleon, and to the subsequent European-wide debates on the concepts and realities of nations, and in particular of nation-states. The Westphalia Treaty had divided Europe into various empires and kingdoms (such as the Ottoman Empire, the Holy Roman Empire, the Swedish Empire, the Kingdom of France, etc.), and for centuries wars were waged between princes (Kabinettskriege in German).

Modern nation-states appeared in the wake of the French Revolution, with the formation of patriotic sentiments for the first time in Spain during the Peninsula War (1808–1813, known in Spain as the Independence War). Despite the restoration of the previous order with the 1815 Congress of Vienna, the "nationalities question" became the main problem of Europe during the Industrial Era, leading in particular to the 1848 Revolutions, the Italian unification completed during the 1871 Franco-Prussian War, which itself culminated in the proclamation of the German Empire in the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles, thus achieving the German unification.

Meanwhile, the Ottoman Empire, the "sick man of Europe", was confronted with endless nationalist movements, which, along with the dissolving of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, would lead to the creation, after World War I, of the various nation-states of the Balkans, with "national minorities" in their borders.[108]

Ethnic nationalism, which advocated the belief in a hereditary membership of the nation, made its appearance in the historical context surrounding the creation of the modern nation-states.

One of its main influences was the Romantic nationalist movement at the turn of the 19th century, represented by figures such as Johann Herder (1744–1803), Johan Fichte (1762–1814) in the Addresses to the German Nation (1808), Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831), or also, in France, Jules Michelet (1798–1874). It was opposed to liberal nationalism, represented by authors such as Ernest Renan (1823–1892), who conceived of the nation as a community, which, instead of being based on the Volk ethnic group and on a specific, common language, was founded on the subjective will to live together ("the nation is a daily plebiscite", 1882) or also John Stuart Mill (1806–1873).[109] Ethnic nationalism blended with scientific racist discourses, as well as with "continental imperialist" (Hannah Arendt, 1951[110]) discourses, for example in the pan-Germanism discourses, which postulated the racial superiority of the German Volk (people/folk). The Pan-German League (Alldeutscher Verband), created in 1891, promoted German imperialism and "racial hygiene", and was opposed to intermarriage with Jews. Another popular current, the Völkisch movement, was also an important proponent of the German ethnic nationalist discourse, and it combined Pan-Germanism with modern racial antisemitism. Members of the Völkisch movement, in particular the Thule Society, would participate in the founding of the German Workers' Party (DAP) in Munich in 1918, the predecessor of the Nazi Party. Pan-Germanism played a decisive role in the interwar period of the 1920s–1930s.[110]

These currents began to associate the idea of the nation with the biological concept of a "master race" (often the "Aryan race" or the "Nordic race") issued from the scientific racist discourse. They conflated nationalities with ethnic groups, called "races", in a radical distinction from previous racial discourses that posited the existence of a "race struggle" inside the nation and the state itself. Furthermore, they believed that political boundaries should mirror these alleged racial and ethnic groups, thus justifying ethnic cleansing, in order to achieve "racial purity" and also to achieve ethnic homogeneity in the nation-state.

Such racist discourses, combined with nationalism, were not, however, limited to pan-Germanism. In France, the transition from Republican liberal nationalism, to ethnic nationalism, which made nationalism a characteristic of far-right movements in France, took place during the Dreyfus Affair at the end of the 19th century. During several years, a nationwide crisis affected French society, concerning the alleged treason of Alfred Dreyfus, a French Jewish military officer. The country polarized itself into two opposite camps, one represented by Émile Zola, who wrote J'Accuse…! in defense of Alfred Dreyfus, and the other represented by the nationalist poet, Maurice Barrès (1862–1923), one of the founders of the ethnic nationalist discourse in France.[111] At the same time, Charles Maurras (1868–1952), founder of the monarchist Action française movement, theorized the "anti-France", composed of the "four confederate states of Protestants, Jews, Freemasons and foreigners" (his actual word for the latter being the pejorative métèques). Indeed, to him the first three were all "internal foreigners", who threatened the ethnic unity of the French people.

History

Ethnocentrism and proto-racism

 
The Book of Genesis's biblical curse on Canaan, which was often misinterpreted as a curse on his father Ham, was used to justify slavery in 19th century America.[112]

Aristotle

Bernard Lewis has cited the Greek philosopher Aristotle who, in his discussion of slavery, stated that while Greeks are free by nature, "barbarians" (non-Greeks) are slaves by nature, in that it is in their nature to be more willing to submit to a despotic government.[113] Though Aristotle does not specify any particular races, he argues that people from nations outside Greece are more prone to the burden of slavery than those from Greece.[114] While Aristotle makes remarks about the most natural slaves being those with strong bodies and slave souls (unfit for rule, unintelligent) which would seem to imply a physical basis for discrimination, he also explicitly states that the right kind of souls and bodies do not always go together, implying that the greatest determinate for inferiority and natural slaves versus natural masters is the soul, not the body.[115] This proto-racism is seen as an important precursor to modern racism by classicist Benjamin Isaac.

Such proto-racism and ethnocentrism must be looked at within context, because a modern understanding of racism based on hereditary inferiority (with modern racism based on eugenics and scientific racism) was not yet developed and it is unclear whether Aristotle believed the natural inferiority of Barbarians was caused by environment and climate (like many of his contemporaries) or by birth.[116]

Historian Dante A. Puzzo, in his discussion of Aristotle, racism, and the ancient world writes that:[117]

Racism rests on two basic assumptions: that a correlation exists between physical characteristics and moral qualities; that mankind is divisible into superior and inferior stocks. Racism, thus defined, is a modern conception, for prior to the XVIth century there was virtually nothing in the life and thought of the West that can be described as racist. To prevent misunderstanding a clear distinction must be made between racism and ethnocentrism ... The Ancient Hebrews, in referring to all who were not Hebrews as Gentiles, were indulging in ethnocentrism, not in racism. ... So it was with the Hellenes who denominated all non-Hellenes—whether the wild Scythians or the Egyptians whom they acknowledged as their mentors in the arts of civilization—Barbarians, the term denoting that which was strange or foreign.

Medieval Arab writers

Bernard Lewis has also cited historians and geographers of the Middle East and North Africa region,[118] including Al-Muqaddasi, Al-Jahiz, Al-Masudi, Abu Rayhan Biruni, Nasir al-Din al-Tusi, and Ibn Qutaybah.[118] Though the Qur'an expresses no racial prejudice, Lewis argues that ethnocentric prejudice later developed among Arabs, for a variety of reasons:[118] their extensive conquests and slave trade; the influence of Aristotelian ideas regarding slavery, which some Muslim philosophers directed towards Zanj (Bantu[119]) and Turkic peoples;[113] and the influence of Judeo-Christian ideas regarding divisions among humankind.[120] By the eighth century, anti-black prejudice among Arabs resulted in discrimination. A number of medieval Arabic authors argued against this prejudice, urging respect for all black people and especially Ethiopians.[121] By the 14th century, a significant number of slaves came from sub-Saharan Africa; Lewis argues that this led to the likes of Egyptian historian Al-Abshibi (1388–1446) writing that "[i]t is said that when the [black] slave is sated, he fornicates, when he is hungry, he steals."[122] According to Lewis, the 14th-century Tunisian scholar Ibn Khaldun also wrote:[118][123]

...beyond [known peoples of black West Africa] to the south there is no civilization in the proper sense. There are only humans who are closer to dumb animals than to rational beings. They live in thickets and caves, and eat herbs and unprepared grain. They frequently eat each other. They cannot be considered human beings. Therefore, the Negro nations are, as a rule, submissive to slavery, because (Negroes) have little that is (essentially) human and possess attributes that are quite similar to those of dumb animals, as we have stated.

According to Wesleyan University professor Abdelmajid Hannoum, French Orientalists projected racist and colonialist views of the 19th century into their translations of medieval Arabic writings, including those of Ibn Khaldun. This resulted in the translated texts racializing Arabs and Berber people, when no such distinction was made in the originals.[124] James E. Lindsay argues that the concept of an Arab identity itself did not exist until modern times,[125] though others like Robert Hoyland have argued that a common sense of Arab identity already existed by the 9th century.[126]

Limpieza de sangre

With the Umayyad Caliphate's conquest of Hispania, Muslim Arabs and Berbers overthrew the previous Visigothic rulers and created Al-Andalus,[127] which contributed to the Golden age of Jewish culture, and lasted for six centuries.[128] It was followed by the centuries-long Reconquista,[129] during which Christian Iberian kingdoms contested Al-Andalus and progressively conquered the divided Muslim kingdoms, culminating in the fall of the Nasrid kingdom of Granada in 1492 and the rise of Ferdinand V and Isabella I as Catholic monarchs of Spain. The legacy Catholic Spaniards then formulated the limpieza de sangre ("cleanliness of blood") doctrine. It was during this time in history that the Western concept of aristocratic "blue blood" emerged in a racialized, religious and feudal context,[130] so as to stem the upward social mobility of the converted New Christians. Robert Lacey explains:[131]

It was the Spaniards who gave the world the notion that an aristocrat's blood is not red but blue. The Spanish nobility started taking shape around the ninth century in classic military fashion, occupying land as warriors on horseback. They were to continue the process for more than five hundred years, clawing back sections of the peninsula from its Moorish occupiers, and a nobleman demonstrated his pedigree by holding up his sword arm to display the filigree of blue-blooded veins beneath his pale skin—proof that his birth had not been contaminated by the dark-skinned enemy. Sangre azul, blue blood, was thus a euphemism for being a white man—Spain's own particular reminder that the refined footsteps of the aristocracy through history carry the rather less refined spoor of racism.

Following the expulsion of the Arabic Moors and most of the Sephardic Jews from the Iberian peninsula, the remaining Jews and Muslims were forced to convert to Roman Catholicism, becoming "New Christians", who were sometimes discriminated against by the "Old Christians" in some cities (including Toledo), despite condemnations by the Church and the State, which both welcomed the new flock.[130] The Inquisition was carried out by members of the Dominican Order in order to weed out the converts who still practiced Judaism and Islam in secret. The system and ideology of the limpieza de sangre ostracized false Christian converts from society in order to protect it against treason.[132] The remnants of such legislation persevered into the 19th century in military contexts.[133]

In Portugal, the legal distinction between New and Old Christian was only ended through a legal decree issued by the Marquis of Pombal in 1772, almost three centuries after the implementation of the racist discrimination. The limpieza de sangre legislation was common also during the colonization of the Americas, where it led to the racial and feudal separation of peoples and social strata in the colonies. It was however often ignored in practice, as the new colonies needed skilled people.[134]

 
A 16th-century illustration by Flemish Protestant Theodor de Bry for Las Casas's Brevisima relación de la destrucción de las Indias, depicting Spanish atrocities during the conquest of Cuba

At the end of the Renaissance, the Valladolid debate (1550–1551), concerning the treatment of the natives of the "New World" pitted the Dominican friar and Bishop of Chiapas, Bartolomé de Las Casas, to another Dominican and Humanist philosopher, Juan Ginés de Sepúlveda. The latter argued that the Indians practiced human sacrifice of innocents, cannibalism, and other such "crimes against nature"; they were unacceptable and should be suppressed by any means possible including war,[135] thus reducing them to slavery or serfdom was in accordance with Catholic theology and natural law. To the contrary, Bartolomé de Las Casas argued that the Amerindians were free men in the natural order and deserved the same treatment as others, according to Catholic theology. It was one of the many controversies concerning racism, slavery, religion, and European morality that would arise in the following centuries and which resulted in the legislation protecting the natives.[136] The marriage between Luisa de Abrego, a free black domestic servant from Seville and Miguel Rodríguez, a white segovian conquistador in 1565 in St. Augustine (Spanish Florida), is the first known and recorded Christian marriage anywhere in the continental United States.[137]

In the Spanish colonies, Spaniards developed a complex caste system based on race, which was used for social control, and which also determined a person's importance in society.[138] While many Latin American countries have long since rendered the system officially illegal through legislation, usually at the time of their independence, prejudice based on degrees of perceived racial distance from European ancestry combined with one's socioeconomic status remain, an echo of the colonial caste system.[139]

Racism as a modern phenomenon

Although antisemitism has a long history, related to Christianity and native Egyptian or Greek religions[140] (anti-Judaism), racism itself is sometimes described as a modern phenomenon. In the view of the French philosopher and historian Michel Foucault, the first formulation of racism emerged in the Early Modern period as the "discourse of race struggle", and a historical and political discourse, which Foucault opposed to the philosophical and juridical discourse of sovereignty.[141] On the other hand, e.g. Chinese self-identification as a "yellow race" predated such European racial concepts.[citation needed]

This European analysis, which first appeared in Great Britain, was then carried on in France by such people as Boulainvilliers, Nicolas Fréret, and then, during the 1789 French Revolution, Sieyès, and afterwards, Augustin Thierry and Cournot. Boulainvilliers, who created the matrix of such racist discourse in medieval France, conceived of the "race" as being something closer to the sense of a "nation", that is, in his time, the "race" meant the "people".

He conceived of France as being divided between various nations—the unified nation-state is an anachronism here—which themselves formed different "races". Boulainvilliers opposed the absolute monarchy, which tried to bypass the aristocracy by establishing a direct relationship to the Third Estate. Thus, he developed the theory that the French aristocrats were the descendants of foreign invaders, whom he called the "Franks", while according to him, the Third Estate constituted the autochthonous, vanquished Gallo-Romans, who were dominated by the Frankish aristocracy as a consequence of the right of conquest. Early modern racism was opposed to nationalism and the nation-state: the Comte de Montlosier, in exile during the French Revolution, who borrowed Boulainvilliers' discourse on the "Nordic race" as being the French aristocracy that invaded the plebeian "Gauls", thus showed his contempt for the Third Estate, calling it "this new people born of slaves ... mixture of all races and of all times".

19th century

 
Advertisement for Pears' Soap Caption reads, "Matchless for the complexion..." Illustration of 'before and after' use of soap by black child in the bath; soap washes off his dark complexion.

While 19th-century racism became closely intertwined with nationalism,[142] leading to the ethnic nationalist discourse that identified the "race" with the "folk", leading to such movements as pan-Germanism, pan-Turkism, pan-Arabism, and pan-Slavism, medieval racism precisely divided the nation into various non-biological "races", which were thought to be the consequence of historical conquests and social conflicts. Michel Foucault traced the genealogy of modern racism to this medieval "historical and political discourse of race struggle". According to him, it divided itself in the 19th century according to two rival lines: on one hand, it was incorporated by racists, biologists and eugenicists, who gave it the modern sense of "race", and they also transformed this popular discourse into a "state racism" (e.g., Nazism). On the other hand, Marxism also seized this discourse founded on the assumption of a political struggle that provided the real engine of history and continued to act underneath the apparent peace. Thus, Marxists transformed the essentialist notion of "race" into the historical notion of "class struggle", defined by socially structured positions: capitalist or proletarian. In The Will to Knowledge (1976), Foucault analyzed another opponent of the "race struggle" discourse: Sigmund Freud's psychoanalysis, which opposed the concept of "blood heredity", prevalent in the 19th century racist discourse.

Authors such as Hannah Arendt, in her 1951 book The Origins of Totalitarianism, have said that the racist ideology (popular racism) which developed at the end of the 19th century helped legitimize the imperialist conquests of foreign territories and the atrocities that sometimes accompanied them (such as the Herero and Namaqua Genocide of 1904–1907 or the Armenian genocide of 1915–1917). Rudyard Kipling's poem, The White Man's Burden (1899), is one of the more famous illustrations of the belief in the inherent superiority of the European culture over the rest of the world, though it is also thought to be a satirical appraisal of such imperialism. Racist ideology thus helped legitimize the conquest and incorporation of foreign territories into an empire, which were regarded as a humanitarian obligation partially as a result of these racist beliefs.

 
A late-19th-century illustration from Ireland from One or Two Neglected Points of View by H. Strickland Constable shows an alleged similarity between "Irish Iberian" and "Negro" features in contrast to the "higher" "Anglo-Teutonic".

However, during the 19th century, Western European colonial powers were involved in the suppression of the Arab slave trade in Africa,[143] as well as in the suppression of the slave trade in West Africa.[144] Some Europeans during the time period objected to injustices that occurred in some colonies and lobbied on behalf of aboriginal peoples. Thus, when the Hottentot Venus was displayed in England in the beginning of the 19th century, the African Association publicly opposed itself to the exhibition. The same year that Kipling published his poem, Joseph Conrad published Heart of Darkness (1899), a clear criticism of the Congo Free State, which was owned by Leopold II of Belgium.

Examples of racial theories used include the creation of the Hamitic ethno-linguistic group during the European exploration of Africa. It was then restricted by Karl Friedrich Lepsius (1810–1877) to non-Semitic Afro-Asiatic languages.[145]

The term Hamite was applied to different populations within North Africa, mainly comprising Ethiopians, Eritreans, Somalis, Berbers, and the ancient Egyptians. Hamites were regarded as Caucasoid peoples who probably originated in either Arabia or Asia on the basis of their cultural, physical and linguistic similarities with the peoples of those areas.[146][147][148] Europeans considered Hamites to be more civilized than Sub-Saharan Africans, and more akin to themselves and Semitic peoples.[149] In the first two-thirds of the 20th century, the Hamitic race was, in fact, considered one of the branches of the Caucasian race, along with the Indo-Europeans, Semites, and the Mediterraneans.

However, the Hamitic peoples themselves were often deemed to have failed as rulers, which was usually ascribed to interbreeding with Negroes. In the mid-20th century, the German scholar Carl Meinhof (1857–1944) claimed that the Bantu race was formed by a merger of Hamitic and Negro races. The Hottentots (Nama or Khoi) were formed by the merger of Hamitic and Bushmen (San) races—both being termed nowadays as Khoisan peoples.

 
One in a series of posters attacking Radical Republicans on the issue of black suffrage, issued during the Pennsylvania gubernatorial election of 1866

In the United States in the early 19th century, the American Colonization Society was established as the primary vehicle for proposals to return black Americans to greater freedom and equality in Africa.[150] The colonization effort resulted from a mixture of motives with its founder Henry Clay stating that "unconquerable prejudice resulting from their color, they never could amalgamate with the free whites of this country. It was desirable, therefore, as it respected them, and the residue of the population of the country, to drain them off".[151] Racism spread throughout the New World in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Whitecapping, which started in Indiana in the late 19th century, soon spread throughout all of North America, causing many African laborers to flee from the land they worked on. In the US, during the 1860s, racist posters were used during election campaigns. In one of these racist posters (see above), a black man is depicted lounging idly in the foreground as one white man ploughs his field and another chops wood. Accompanying labels are: "In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat thy bread", and "The white man must work to keep his children and pay his taxes." The black man wonders, "Whar is de use for me to work as long as dey make dese appropriations." Above in a cloud is an image of the "Freedman's Bureau! Negro Estimate of Freedom!" The bureau is pictured as a large domed building resembling the U.S. Capitol and is inscribed "Freedom and No Work". Its columns and walls are labeled, "Candy", "Rum, Gin, Whiskey", "Sugar Plums", "Indolence", "White Women", "Apathy", "White Sugar", "Idleness", and so on.

On June 5, 1873, Sir Francis Galton, distinguished English explorer and cousin of Charles Darwin, wrote in a letter to The Times:

My proposal is to make the encouragement of Chinese settlements of Africa a part of our national policy, in the belief that the Chinese immigrants would not only maintain their position, but that they would multiply and their descendants supplant the inferior Negro race ... I should expect that the African seaboard, now sparsely occupied by lazy, palavering savages, might in a few years be tenanted by industrious, order-loving Chinese, living either as a semidetached dependency of China, or else in perfect freedom under their own law.[152]

20th century

 
Austrian Nazis and local residents watch as Jews are forced to scrub the pavement, Vienna, March 1938
 
Eichmann's list of the Jewish population in Europe, drafted for the Wannsee Conference, held to ensure the cooperation of various levels of the Nazi government in the Final Solution

The Nazi party, which seized power in the 1933 German elections and maintained a dictatorship over much of Europe until the End of World War II on the European continent, deemed the Germans to be part of an Aryan "master race" (Herrenvolk), who therefore had the right to expand their territory and enslave or kill members of other races deemed inferior.[153]

The racial ideology conceived by the Nazis graded humans on a scale of pure Aryan to non-Aryan, with the latter viewed as subhuman. At the top of the scale of pure Aryans were Germans and other Germanic peoples including the Dutch, Scandinavians, and the English as well as other peoples such as some northern Italians and the French, who were said to have a suitable admixture of Germanic blood.[154] Nazi policies labeled Romani people, people of color, and Slavs (mainly Poles, Serbs, Russians, Belarusians, Ukrainians and Czechs) as inferior non-Aryan subhumans.[155][156] Jews were at the bottom of the hierarchy, considered inhuman and thus unworthy of life.[156][157][158][159][160][161][162] In accordance with Nazi racial ideology, approximately six million Jews were killed in the Holocaust. 2.5 million ethnic Poles, 0.5 million ethnic Serbs and 0.2–0.5 million Romani were killed by the regime and its collaborators.[163]

The Nazis considered most Slavs to be non-Aryan Untermenschen. The Nazi Party's chief racial theorist, Alfred Rosenberg, adopted the term from Klansman Lothrop Stoddard's 1922 book The Revolt Against Civilization: The Menace of the Under-man.[164] In the secret plan Generalplan Ost ("Master Plan East") the Nazis resolved to expel, enslave, or exterminate most Slavic people to provide "living space" for Germans,[165] but Nazi policy towards Slavs changed during World War II due to manpower shortages which necessitated limited Slavic participation in the Waffen-SS.[166] Significant war crimes were committed against Slavs, particularly Poles, and Soviet POWs had a far higher mortality rate than their American and British counterparts due to deliberate neglect and mistreatment. Between June 1941 and January 1942, the Nazis killed an estimated 2.8 million Red Army POWs, whom they viewed as "subhuman".[167]

In the years 1943–1945, around 120,000 Polish people, mostly women and children, became the victims of ethnicity-based massacres by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, which was then operating in the territory of occupied Poland.[168] In addition to Poles who represented the vast majority of the murdered people, the victims also included Jews, Armenians, Russians, and Ukrainians who were married to Poles or attempted to help them.[169]

During the intensification of ties with Nazi Germany in the 1930s, Ante Pavelić and the Ustaše and their idea of the Croatian nation became increasingly race-oriented.[170][171][172] The Ustaše view of national and racial identity, as well as the theory of Serbs as an inferior race, was influenced by Croatian nationalists and intellectuals from the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century.[170][173][174][175] Serbs were primary targets of racial laws and murders in the puppet Independent State of Croatia (NDH); Jews and Roma were also targeted.[176] The Ustaše introduced laws to strip Serbs of their citizenship, livelihoods, and possessions.[177] During the genocide in the NDH, Serbs suffered among the highest casualty rates in Europe during the World War II, and the NDH was one of the most lethal regimes in the 20th century.[178][179][172]

German praise for America's institutional racism was continuous throughout the early 1930s, and Nazi lawyers were advocates of the use of American models.[180] Race based U.S. citizenship laws and anti-miscegenation laws (no race mixing) directly inspired the Nazi's two principal Nuremberg racial laws—the Citizenship Law and the Blood Law.[180] Hitler's 1925 memoir Mein Kampf was full of admiration for America's treatment of "coloreds".[181] Nazi expansion eastward was accompanied with invocation of America's colonial expansion westward, with the accompanying actions toward the Native Americans.[182] In 1928, Hitler praised Americans for having "gunned down the millions of Redskins to a few hundred thousand, and now keeps the modest remnant under observation in a cage."[183] On Nazi Germany's expansion eastward, in 1941 Hitler stated, "Our Mississippi [the line beyond which Thomas Jefferson wanted all Indians expelled] must be the Volga."[182]

 
A drinking fountain from the mid-20th century labelled "Colored" with an African-American man drinking
 
A sign posted above a bar that reads "No beer sold to Indians [Native Americans]". Birney, Montana, 1941.

White supremacy was dominant in the U.S. from its founding up to the civil rights movement.[184] On the U.S. immigration laws prior to 1965, sociologist Stephen Klineberg cited the law as clearly declaring "that Northern Europeans are a superior subspecies of the white race."[185] While anti-Asian racism was embedded in U.S. politics and culture in the early 20th century, Indians were also racialized for their anticolonialism, with U.S. officials, casting them as a "Hindu" menace, pushing for Western imperial expansion abroad.[186] The Naturalization Act of 1790 limited U.S. citizenship to whites only, and in the 1923 case, United States v. Bhagat Singh Thind, the Supreme Court ruled that high caste Hindus were not "white persons" and were therefore racially ineligible for naturalized citizenship.[187][188] It was after the Luce–Celler Act of 1946 that a quota of 100 Indians per year could immigrate to the U.S. and become citizens.[189] The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 dramatically opened entry to the U.S. to immigrants other than traditional Northern European and Germanic groups, and as a result would significantly alter the demographic mix in the U.S.[185]

Serious race riots in Durban between Indians and Zulus erupted in 1949.[190] Ne Win's rise to power in Burma in 1962 and his relentless persecution of "resident aliens" led to an exodus of some 300,000 Burmese Indians.[191] They migrated to escape racial discrimination and wholesale nationalisation of private enterprises a few years later, in 1964.[192] The Zanzibar Revolution of January 12, 1964, put an end to the local Arab dynasty.[193] Thousands of Arabs and Indians in Zanzibar were massacred in riots, and thousands more were detained or fled the island.[194] In August 1972, Ugandan President Idi Amin started the expropriation of properties owned by Asians and Europeans.[195][196] In the same year, Amin ethnically cleansed Uganda's Asians, giving them 90 days to leave the country.[197] Shortly after World War II, the South African National Party took control of the government in South Africa. Between 1948 and 1994, the apartheid regime took place. This regime based its ideology on the racial separation of whites and non-whites, including the unequal rights of non-whites. Several protests and violence occurred during the struggle against apartheid, the most famous of these include the Sharpeville Massacre in 1960, the Soweto uprising in 1976, the Church Street bombing of 1983, and the Cape Town peace march of 1989.[198]

Contemporary

 
On 12 September 2011, Julius Malema, the youth leader of South Africa's ruling ANC, was found guilty of hate speech for singing "Shoot the Boer" at a number of public events.[199]

During the Congo Civil War (1998–2003), Pygmy people were hunted down like game animals and eaten. Both sides in the war regarded them as "subhuman" and some say their flesh can confer magical powers. UN human rights activists reported in 2003 that rebels had carried out acts of cannibalism. Sinafasi Makelo, a representative of the Mbuti pygmies, has asked the UN Security Council to recognise cannibalism as both a crime against humanity and an act of genocide.[200] A report released by the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination condemns Botswana's treatment of the 'Bushmen' as racist.[201] In 2008, the tribunal of the 15-nation Southern African Development Community (SADC) accused Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe of having a racist attitude towards white people.[202][203]

The mass demonstrations and riots against African students in Nanjing, China, lasted from December 1988 to January 1989.[204] In November 2009, British newspaper The Guardian reported that Lou Jing, of mixed Chinese and African parentage, had emerged as the most famous talent show contestant in China and has become the subject of intense debate because of her skin color.[205] Her attention in the media opened serious debates about racism in China and racial prejudice.[206]

Some 70,000 black African Mauritanians were expelled from Mauritania in the late 1980s.[207] In the Sudan, black African captives in the civil war were often enslaved, and female prisoners were often sexually abused.[208] The Darfur conflict has been described by some as a racial matter.[209] In October 2006, Niger announced that it would deport the approximately 150,000[210] Arabs living in the Diffa region of eastern Niger to Chad.[211] While the government collected Arabs in preparation for the deportation, two girls died, reportedly after fleeing Government forces, and three women suffered miscarriages.[212]

 
The burnt out remains of Govinda's Indian Restaurant in Fiji, May 2000

The Jakarta riots of May 1998 targeted many Chinese Indonesians.[213] The anti-Chinese legislation was in the Indonesian constitution until 1998. Resentment against Chinese workers has led to violent confrontations in Africa[214][215][216] and Oceania.[217][218] Anti-Chinese rioting, involving tens of thousands of people,[219] broke out in Papua New Guinea in May 2009.[220] Indo-Fijians suffered violent attacks after the Fiji coup in 2000.[221] Non-indigenous citizens of Fiji are subject to discrimination.[222][223] Racial divisions also exist in Guyana,[224] Malaysia,[225] Trinidad and Tobago,[226] Madagascar,[227] and South Africa.[228] In Malaysia such racist state policies are codified on many levels,[229][230] see Bumiputera.

Peter Bouckaert, the Human Rights Watch's emergencies director, said in an interview that "racist hatred" is the chief motivation behind the violence against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar.[231]

One form of racism in the United States was enforced racial segregation, which existed until the 1960s, when it was outlawed in the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It has been argued that this separation of races continues to exist de facto today in different forms, such as lack of access to loans and resources or discrimination by police and other government officials.[232][233]

The 2016 Pew Research poll found that Italians, in particular, hold strong anti-Romani views, with 82% of Italians expressing negative opinions about Romani. In Greece, there are 67%, in Hungary, 64%, in France, 61%, in Spain, 49%, in Poland, 47%, in the UK, 45%, in Sweden, 42%, in Germany, 40%, and in the Netherlands, 37%, that have an unfavourable view of Roma.[234] A survey conducted by Harvard University found the Czech Republic, Lithuania, Belarus and Ukraine had the strongest racial bias against black people in Europe, while Serbia, Slovenia and Bosnia and Herzegovina had the weakest racial bias, followed by Croatia and Ireland.[235][236]

Scientific racism

 
Drawings from Josiah C. Nott and George Gliddon's Indigenous races of the earth (1857), which suggested black people ranked between white people and chimpanzees in terms of intelligence

The modern biological definition of race developed in the 19th century with scientific racist theories. The term scientific racism refers to the use of science to justify and support racist beliefs, which goes back to the early 18th century, though it gained most of its influence in the mid-19th century, during the New Imperialism period. Also known as academic racism, such theories first needed to overcome the Church's resistance to positivist accounts of history and its support of monogenism, the concept that all human beings were originated from the same ancestors, in accordance with creationist accounts of history.

These racist theories put forth on scientific hypothesis were combined with unilineal theories of social progress, which postulated the superiority of the European civilization over the rest of the world. Furthermore, they frequently made use of the idea of "survival of the fittest", a term coined by Herbert Spencer in 1864, associated with ideas of competition, which were named social Darwinism in the 1940s. Charles Darwin himself opposed the idea of rigid racial differences in The Descent of Man (1871), in which he argued that humans were all of one species, sharing common descent. He recognised racial differences as varieties of humanity, and emphasised the close similarities between people of all races in mental faculties, tastes, dispositions and habits, while still contrasting the culture of the "lowest savages" with European civilization.[237][238]

At the end of the 19th century, proponents of scientific racism intertwined themselves with eugenics discourses of "degeneration of the race" and "blood heredity".[citation needed] Henceforth, scientific racist discourses could be defined as the combination of polygenism, unilinealism, social Darwinism, and eugenism. They found their scientific legitimacy on physical anthropology, anthropometry, craniometry, phrenology, physiognomy, and others now discredited disciplines in order to formulate racist prejudices.

Before being disqualified in the 20th century by the American school of cultural anthropology (Franz Boas, etc.), the British school of social anthropology (Bronisław Malinowski, Alfred Radcliffe-Brown, etc.), the French school of ethnology (Claude Lévi-Strauss, etc.), as well as the discovery of the neo-Darwinian synthesis, such sciences, in particular anthropometry, were used to deduce behaviours and psychological characteristics from outward, physical appearances.

The neo-Darwinian synthesis, first developed in the 1930s, eventually led to a gene-centered view of evolution in the 1960s. According to the Human Genome Project, the most complete mapping of human DNA to date indicates that there is no clear genetic basis to racial groups. While some genes are more common in certain populations, there are no genes that exist in all members of one population and no members of any other.[239]

Heredity and eugenics

The first theory of eugenics was developed in 1869 by Francis Galton (1822–1911), who used the then-popular concept of degeneration. He applied statistics to study human differences and the alleged "inheritance of intelligence", foreshadowing future uses of "intelligence testing" by the anthropometry school. Such theories were vividly described by the writer Émile Zola (1840–1902), who started publishing in 1871, a twenty-novel cycle, Les Rougon-Macquart, where he linked heredity to behavior. Thus, Zola described the high-born Rougons as those involved in politics (Son Excellence Eugène Rougon) and medicine (Le Docteur Pascal) and the low-born Macquarts as those fatally falling into alcoholism (L'Assommoir), prostitution (Nana), and homicide (La Bête humaine).

During the rise of Nazism in Germany, some scientists in Western nations worked to debunk the regime's racial theories. A few argued against racist ideologies and discrimination, even if they believed in the alleged existence of biological races. However, in the fields of anthropology and biology, these were minority positions until the mid-20th century.[240] According to the 1950 UNESCO statement, The Race Question, an international project to debunk racist theories had been attempted in the mid-1930s. However, this project had been abandoned. Thus, in 1950, UNESCO declared that it had resumed:

...up again, after a lapse of fifteen years, a project that the International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation has wished to carry through but that it had to abandon in deference to the appeasement policy of the pre-war period. The race question had become one of the pivots of Nazi ideology and policy. Masaryk and Beneš took the initiative of calling for a conference to re-establish in the minds and consciences of men everywhere the truth about race ... Nazi propaganda was able to continue its baleful work unopposed by the authority of an international organisation.

The Third Reich's racial policies, its eugenics programs and the extermination of Jews in the Holocaust, as well as the Romani people in the Porrajmos (the Romani Holocaust) and others minorities led to a change in opinions about scientific research into race after the war.[citation needed] Changes within scientific disciplines, such as the rise of the Boasian school of anthropology in the United States contributed to this shift. These theories were strongly denounced in the 1950 UNESCO statement, signed by internationally renowned scholars, and titled The Race Question.

Polygenism and racial typologies

 
Madison Grant's map, from 1916, charting the "present distribution of European races", with the Nordics in red, the Alpines in green, and the Mediterraneans in yellow

Works such as Arthur de Gobineau's An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races (1853–1855) may be considered one of the first theorizations of this new racism, founded on an essentialist notion of race, which opposed the former racial discourse, of Boulainvilliers for example, which saw in races a fundamentally historical reality, which changed over time. Gobineau, thus, attempted to frame racism within the terms of biological differences among humans, giving it the legitimacy of biology.

Gobineau's theories would be expanded in France by Georges Vacher de Lapouge (1854–1936)'s typology of races, who published in 1899 The Aryan and his Social Role, in which he claimed that the white "Aryan race" "dolichocephalic", was opposed to the "brachycephalic" race, of whom the "Jew" was the archetype. Vacher de Lapouge thus created a hierarchical classification of races, in which he identified the "Homo europaeus (Teutonic, Protestant, etc.), the "Homo alpinus" (Auvergnat, Turkish, etc.), and finally the "Homo mediterraneus" (Neapolitan, Andalus, etc.) He assimilated races and social classes, considering that the French upper class was a representation of the Homo europaeus, while the lower class represented the Homo alpinus. Applying Galton's eugenics to his theory of races, Vacher de Lapouge's "selectionism" aimed first at achieving the annihilation of trade unionists, considered to be a "degenerate"; second, creating types of man each destined to one end, in order to prevent any contestation of labour conditions. His "anthroposociology" thus aimed at blocking social conflict by establishing a fixed, hierarchical social order.[241]

The same year, William Z. Ripley used identical racial classification in The Races of Europe (1899), which would have a great influence in the United States. Other scientific authors include H.S. Chamberlain at the end of the 19th century (a British citizen who naturalized himself as German because of his admiration for the "Aryan race") and Madison Grant, a eugenicist and author of The Passing of the Great Race (1916). Madison Grant provided statistics for the Immigration Act of 1924, which severely restricted immigration of Jews, Slavs, and Southern Europeans, who were subsequently hindered in seeking to escape Nazi Germany.[242]

Human zoos

Human zoos (called "People Shows"), were an important means of bolstering popular racism by connecting it to scientific racism: they were both objects of public curiosity and of anthropology and anthropometry.[243][244] Joice Heth, an African-American slave, was displayed by P.T. Barnum in 1836, a few years after the exhibition of Saartjie Baartman, the "Hottentot Venus", in England. Such exhibitions became common in the New Imperialism period, and remained so until World War II. Carl Hagenbeck, inventor of the modern zoos, exhibited animals beside humans who were considered "savages".[245][246]

Congolese pygmy Ota Benga was displayed in 1906 by eugenicist Madison Grant, head of the Bronx Zoo, as an attempt to illustrate the "missing link" between humans and orangutans: thus, racism was tied to Darwinism, creating a social Darwinist ideology that tried to ground itself in Darwin's scientific discoveries. The 1931 Paris Colonial Exhibition displayed Kanaks from New Caledonia.[247] A "Congolese village" was on display as late as 1958 at the Brussels' World Fair.

Theories about the origins of racism

 
Sociological model of ethnic and racial conflict

Evolutionary psychologists John Tooby and Leda Cosmides were puzzled by the fact that in the US, race is one of the three characteristics most often used in brief descriptions of individuals (the others are age and sex). They reasoned that natural selection would not have favoured the evolution of an instinct for using race as a classification, because for most of human history, humans almost never encountered members of other races. Tooby and Cosmides hypothesized that modern people use race as a proxy (rough-and-ready indicator) for coalition membership, since a better-than-random guess about "which side" another person is on will be helpful if one does not actually know in advance.

Their colleague Robert Kurzban designed an experiment whose results appeared to support this hypothesis. Using the memory confusion protocol, they presented subjects with pictures of individuals and sentences, allegedly spoken by these individuals, which presented two sides of a debate. The errors that the subjects made in recalling who said what indicated that they sometimes mis-attributed a statement to a speaker of the same race as the "correct" speaker, although they also sometimes mis-attributed a statement to a speaker "on the same side" as the "correct" speaker. In a second run of the experiment, the team also distinguished the "sides" in the debate by clothing of similar colors; and in this case the effect of racial similarity in causing mistakes almost vanished, being replaced by the color of their clothing. In other words, the first group of subjects, with no clues from clothing, used race as a visual guide to guessing who was on which side of the debate; the second group of subjects used the clothing color as their main visual clue, and the effect of race became very small.[248]

Some research suggests that ethnocentric thinking may have actually contributed to the development of cooperation. Political scientists Ross Hammond and Robert Axelrod created a computer simulation wherein virtual individuals were randomly assigned one of a variety of skin colors, and then one of a variety of trading strategies: be color-blind, favor those of your own color, or favor those of other colors. They found that the ethnocentric individuals clustered together, then grew, until all the non-ethnocentric individuals were wiped out.[249]

In The Selfish Gene, evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins writes that "Blood-feuds and inter-clan warfare are easily interpretable in terms of Hamilton's genetic theory." Dawkins writes that racial prejudice, while not evolutionarily adaptive, "could be interpreted as an irrational generalization of a kin-selected tendency to identify with individuals physically resembling oneself, and to be nasty to individuals different in appearance."[250] Simulation-based experiments in evolutionary game theory have attempted to provide an explanation for the selection of ethnocentric-strategy phenotypes.[251]

Despite support for evolutionary theories relating to an innate origin of racism, various studies have suggested racism is associated with lower intelligence and less diverse peer groups during childhood. A neuroimaging study on amygdala activity during racial matching activities found increased activity to be associated with adolescent age as well as less racially diverse peer groups, which the author conclude suggest a learned aspect of racism.[252] A meta analysis of neuroimaging studies found amygdala activity correlated to increased scores on implicit measures of racial bias. It was also argued amygdala activity in response to racial stimuli represents increased threat perception rather than the traditional theory of the amygdala activity represented ingroup-outgroup processing.[253] Racism has also been associated with lower childhood IQ in an analysis of 15,000 people in the UK.[254]

State-sponsored racism

 
Separate "white" and "colored" entrances to a café in North Carolina, 1940
 
1935 Chart from Nazi Germany used to explain the Nuremberg Laws, defining which Germans were to be considered Jews and stripped of their citizenship. Germans with three or more Jewish grandparents were defined as Jews, Germans with one or two Jewish grandparents were deemed Mischling (mixed-blood).

State racism—the institutions and practices of a nation-state that are grounded in racist ideology—has played a major role in all instances of settler colonialism, from the United States to Australia.[citation needed] It also played a prominent role in the Nazi German regime, in fascist regimes throughout Europe, and during the early years of Japan's Shōwa period. These governments advocated and implemented ideologies and policies that were racist, xenophobic, and, in the case of Nazism, genocidal.[255][256]

The Nuremberg Race Laws of 1935 prohibited sexual relations between any Aryan and Jew, considering it Rassenschande, "racial pollution". The Nuremberg Laws stripped all Jews, even quarter- and half-Jews (second and first degree Mischlings), of their German citizenship. This meant that they had no basic citizens' rights, e.g., the right to vote. In 1936, Jews were banned from all professional jobs, effectively preventing them from having any influence in education, politics, higher education, and industry. On 15 November 1938, Jewish children were banned from going to normal schools. By April 1939, nearly all Jewish companies had either collapsed under financial pressure and declining profits, or had been persuaded to sell out to the Nazi government. This further reduced their rights as human beings; they were in many ways officially separated from the German populace. Similar laws existed in Bulgaria—The Law for protection of the nation, Hungary, Romania, and Austria.

 
19th century political cartoon: Uncle Sam kicks out the Chinaman, referring to the Chinese Exclusion Act

Legislative state racism is known to have been enforced by the National Party of South Africa during its Apartheid regime between 1948 and 1994. Here, a series of Apartheid legislation was passed through the legal systems to make it legal for white South Africans to have rights which were superior to those of non-white South Africans. Non-white South Africans were not allowed involvement in any governing matters, including voting; access to quality healthcare; the provision of basic services, including clean water; electricity; as well as access to adequate schooling. Non-white South Africans were also prevented from accessing certain public areas, from using certain public transportation, and were required to live only in certain designated areas. Non-white South Africans were taxed differently than white South Africans and they were also required to carry on them at all times additional documentation, which later became known as "dom passes", to certify their non-white South African citizenship. All of these legislative racial laws were abolished through a series of equal human rights laws which were passed at the end of the Apartheid era in the early 1990s.

Anti-racism

Anti-racism includes beliefs, actions, movements, and policies which are adopted or developed in order to oppose racism. In general, it promotes an egalitarian society in which people are not discriminated against on the basis of race. Examples of anti-racist movements include the civil rights movement, the Anti-Apartheid Movement and Black Lives Matter. Nonviolent resistance is sometimes embraced as an element of anti-racist movements, although this was not always the case. Hate crime laws, affirmative action, and bans on racist speech are also examples of government policy which is intended to suppress racism.

See also

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Further reading

  • Allen, Theodore. (1994). The Invention of the White Race: Volume 1 London: Verso.
  • Allen, Theodore. (1997). The Invention of the White Race: Volume 2 London: Verso.
  • Barkan, Elazar (1992), The Retreat of Scientific Racism : Changing Concepts of Race in Britain and the United States between the World Wars, Cambridge University Press, New York.
  • Barth, Boris: , European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History, 2011, retrieved: November 16, 2011.
  • Bolick, Clint (2008). "Racism". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Cato Institute. pp. 411–412. ISBN 978-1412965804. OCLC 750831024.
  • Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo. 2018. Racism without Racists: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
  • Curta, Florin (2001). The Making of the Slavs: History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region, c. 500–700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-42888-0.
  • Dain, Bruce (2002), A Hideous Monster of the Mind : American Race Theory in the Early Republic, Harvard University Press, Cambridge. (18th century US racial theory)
  • Daniels, Jessie (1997), White Lies: Race, Class, Gender and Sexuality in White Supremacist Discourse, Routledge, New York.
  • Daniels, Jessie (2009), Cyber Racism: White Supremacy Online and the New Attack on Civil Rights, Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, MD.
  • Ehrenreich, Eric (2007), The Nazi Ancestral Proof: Genealogy, Racial Science, and the Final Solution, Indiana University Press, Bloomington.
  • Ewen & Ewen (2006), "Typecasting: On the Arts and Sciences of Human Inequality", Seven Stories Press, New York.
  • Feagin, Joe R. (2006). Systemic Racism: A Theory of Oppression, Routledge: New York.
  • Feagin, Joe R. (2009). Racist America: Roots, Current Realities, and Future Reparations, 2nd Edition.Routledge: New York.
  • Eliav-Feldon, Miriam, Isaac, Benjamin & Ziegler, Joseph. 2009. The Origins of Racism in the West, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge
  • Gibson, Rich (2005) Against Racism and Irrationalism
  • Graves, Joseph. (2004) The Race Myth NY: Dutton.
  • Ignatiev, Noel. 1995. How the Irish Became White NY: Routledge.
  • Isaac, Benjamin. 1995 The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity Princeton: Princeton University Press
  • Lentin, Alana. (2008) Racism: A Beginner's Guide Oxford: One World.
  • Lévi-Strauss, Claude (1952), Race and History, (UNESCO).
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  • Moody-Adams, Michele (2005), "Racism", in Frey, R.G.; Heath Wellman, Christopher (eds.), A companion to applied ethics, Blackwell Companions to Philosophy, Oxford; Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing, pp. 89–101, doi:10.1002/9780470996621.ch7, ISBN 978-1-4051-3345-6.
  • Rocchio, Vincent F. (2000), Reel Racism : Confronting Hollywood's Construction of Afro-American Culture, Westview Press.
  • Smedley, Audrey; Smedley, Brian D. (2005). "Race as Biology if Fiction, Racism as a Social Problem is Real". American Psychologist. 60 (1): 16–26. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.694.7956. doi:10.1037/0003-066x.60.1.16. PMID 15641918.
  • Smedley, Audrey. 2007. Race in North America: Origins and Evolution of a World View. Boulder, CO: Westview.
  • Stoler, Ann Laura (1997). "Racial Histories and Their Regimes of Truth". Political Power and Social Theory. 11: 183–206. (historiography of race and racism)
  • Taguieff, Pierre-André (1987), La Force du préjugé : Essai sur le racisme et ses doubles, Tel Gallimard, La Découverte.
  • Poliakov, Leon. The Aryan Myth: A History of Racist and Nationalistic Ideas In Europe (Barnes & Noble Books (1996)) ISBN 0-7607-0034-6.
  • Trepagnier, Barbara. 2006. Silent Racism: How Well-Meaning White People Perpetuate the Racial Divide. Paradigm Publishers.
  • Twine, France Winddance (1997), Racism in a Racial Democracy: The Maintenance of White Supremacy in Brazil, Rutgers University Press.
  • UNESCO, The Race Question, 1950
  • Tali Farkash, "Racists among us" in Y-Net (Yediot Aharonot), "Jewish Scene" section, April 20, 2007
  • Winant, Howard The New Politics of Race (2004)
  • Winant, Howard and Omi, Michael Racial Formation in the United States Routeledge (1986); Second Edition (1994).
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  • Wright W.D. (1998) "Racism Matters", Westport, CT: Praeger.

External links

  • Being a Black Male in Cuba – By Lucia Lopez, Havana Times May 5, 2009.
  • Race, history and culture – Ethics – March 1996 – Extract of two articles by Claude Lévi-Strauss.
  • – Information about race, racism and racial distinctions in the law.
  • RacismReview – Created and maintained by American sociologists Joe Feagin, PhD and Jessie Daniels, PhD, provides a research-based analysis of racism.
  • The Impact of Racism on Child and Adolescent Health

racism, belief, that, groups, humans, possess, different, behavioral, traits, corresponding, inherited, attributes, divided, based, superiority, race, over, another, also, mean, prejudice, discrimination, antagonism, directed, against, other, people, because, . Racism is the belief that groups of humans possess different behavioral traits corresponding to inherited attributes and can be divided based on the superiority of one race over another 1 2 3 It may also mean prejudice discrimination or antagonism directed against other people because they are of a different race or ethnicity 2 Modern variants of racism are often based in social perceptions of biological differences between peoples These views can take the form of social actions practices or beliefs or political systems in which different races are ranked as inherently superior or inferior to each other based on presumed shared inheritable traits abilities or qualities 2 3 There have been attempts to legitimize racist beliefs through scientific means such as scientific racism which have been overwhelmingly shown to be unfounded In terms of political systems e g apartheid that support the expression of prejudice or aversion in discriminatory practices or laws racist ideology may include associated social aspects such as nativism xenophobia otherness segregation hierarchical ranking and supremacism While the concepts of race and ethnicity are considered to be separate in contemporary social science the two terms have a long history of equivalence in popular usage and older social science literature Ethnicity is often used in a sense close to one traditionally attributed to race the division of human groups based on qualities assumed to be essential or innate to the group e g shared ancestry or shared behavior Racism and racial discrimination are often used to describe discrimination on an ethnic or cultural basis independent of whether these differences are described as racial According to the United Nations s Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination there is no distinction between the terms racial and ethnic discrimination It further concludes that superiority based on racial differentiation is scientifically false morally condemnable socially unjust and dangerous The convention also declared that there is no justification for racial discrimination anywhere in theory or in practice 4 Racism is a relatively modern concept arising in the European age of imperialism the subsequent growth of capitalism and especially the Atlantic slave trade 1 5 of which it was a major driving force 6 It was also a major force behind racial segregation in the United States in the 19th and early 20th centuries and of apartheid in South Africa 19th and 20th century racism in Western culture is particularly well documented and constitutes a reference point in studies and discourses about racism 7 Racism has played a role in genocides such as the Holocaust the Armenian genocide the Rwandan genocide and the Genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia as well as colonial projects including the European colonization of the Americas Africa Asia and the population transfer in the Soviet Union including deportations of indigenous minorities 8 Indigenous peoples have been and are often subject to racist attitudes Contents 1 Etymology definition and usage 1 1 Legal 1 2 Social and behavioral sciences 1 3 Humanities 1 4 Popular usage 2 Aspects 2 1 Aversive racism 2 2 Color blindness 2 3 Cultural 2 4 Economic 2 5 Institutional 2 6 Othering 2 7 Racial discrimination 2 8 Racial segregation 2 9 Supremacism 2 10 Symbolic modern 2 11 Subconscious biases 3 International law and racial discrimination 4 Ideology 5 Ethnicity and ethnic conflicts 5 1 Ethnic and racial nationalism 6 History 6 1 Ethnocentrism and proto racism 6 1 1 Aristotle 6 1 2 Medieval Arab writers 6 2 Limpieza de sangre 6 3 Racism as a modern phenomenon 6 4 19th century 6 5 20th century 6 6 Contemporary 7 Scientific racism 7 1 Heredity and eugenics 7 2 Polygenism and racial typologies 7 3 Human zoos 8 Theories about the origins of racism 9 State sponsored racism 10 Anti racism 11 See also 12 References and notes 13 Further reading 14 External linksEtymology definition and usage An early use of the word racism by Richard Henry Pratt in 1902 Association of races and classes is necessary to destroy racism and classism In the 19th century many scientists subscribed to the belief that the human population can be divided into races The term racism is a noun describing the state of being racist i e subscribing to the belief that the human population can or should be classified into races with differential abilities and dispositions which in turn may motivate a political ideology in which rights and privileges are differentially distributed based on racial categories The term racist may be an adjective or a noun the latter describing a person who holds those beliefs 9 The origin of the root word race is not clear Linguists generally agree that it came to the English language from Middle French but there is no such agreement on how it generally came into Latin based languages A recent proposal is that it derives from the Arabic ra s which means head beginning origin or the Hebrew rosh which has a similar meaning 10 Early race theorists generally held the view that some races were inferior to others and they consequently believed that the differential treatment of races was fully justified 11 12 13 These early theories guided pseudo scientific research assumptions the collective endeavors to adequately define and form hypotheses about racial differences are generally termed scientific racism though this term is a misnomer due to the lack of any actual science backing the claims Most biologists anthropologists and sociologists reject a taxonomy of races in favor of more specific and or empirically verifiable criteria such as geography ethnicity or a history of endogamy 14 Human genome research indicates that race is not a meaningful genetic classification of humans 15 16 17 18 An entry in the Oxford English Dictionary 2008 defines racialism as a n earlier term than racism but now largely superseded by it and cites the term racialism in a 1902 quote 19 The revised Oxford English Dictionary cites the shorter term racism in a quote from the year 1903 20 It was defined by the Oxford English Dictionary 2nd edition 1989 as t he theory that distinctive human characteristics and abilities are determined by race the same dictionary termed racism a synonym of racialism belief in the superiority of a particular race By the end of World War II racism had acquired the same supremacist connotations formerly associated with racialism racism by then implied racial discrimination racial supremacism and a harmful intent The term race hatred had also been used by sociologist Frederick Hertz in the late 1920s As its history indicates the popular use of the word racism is relatively recent The word came into widespread usage in the Western world in the 1930s when it was used to describe the social and political ideology of Nazism which treated race as a naturally given political unit 21 It is commonly agreed that racism existed before the coinage of the word but there is not a wide agreement on a single definition of what racism is and what it is not 11 Today some scholars of racism prefer to use the concept in the plural racisms in order to emphasize its many different forms that do not easily fall under a single definition They also argue that different forms of racism have characterized different historical periods and geographical areas 22 Garner 2009 p 11 summarizes different existing definitions of racism and identifies three common elements contained in those definitions of racism First a historical hierarchical power relationship between groups second a set of ideas an ideology about racial differences and third discriminatory actions practices 11 Legal Though many countries around the globe have passed laws related to race and discrimination the first significant international human rights instrument developed by the United Nations UN was the Universal Declaration of Human Rights UDHR 23 which was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1948 The UDHR recognizes that if people are to be treated with dignity they require economic rights social rights including education and the rights to cultural and political participation and civil liberty It further states that everyone is entitled to these rights without distinction of any kind such as race colour sex language religion political or other opinion national or social origin property birth or other status The UN does not define racism however it does define racial discrimination According to the 1965 UN International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination 24 The term racial discrimination shall mean any distinction exclusion restriction or preference based on race colour descent or national or ethnic origin that has the purpose or effect of nullifying or impairing the recognition enjoyment or exercise on an equal footing of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political economic social cultural or any other field of public life In their 1978 United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO Declaration on Race and Racial Prejudice Article 1 the UN states All human beings belong to a single species and are descended from a common stock They are born equal in dignity and rights and all form an integral part of humanity 25 The UN definition of racial discrimination does not make any distinction between discrimination based on ethnicity and race in part because the distinction between the two has been a matter of debate among academics including anthropologists 26 Similarly in British law the phrase racial group means any group of people who are defined by reference to their race colour nationality including citizenship or ethnic or national origin 27 In Norway the word race has been removed from national laws concerning discrimination because the use of the phrase is considered problematic and unethical 28 29 The Norwegian Anti Discrimination Act bans discrimination based on ethnicity national origin descent and skin color 30 Social and behavioral sciences Main article Sociology of race and ethnic relations Sociologists in general recognize race as a social construct This means that although the concepts of race and racism are based on observable biological characteristics any conclusions drawn about race on the basis of those observations are heavily influenced by cultural ideologies Racism as an ideology exists in a society at both the individual and institutional level While much of the research and work on racism during the last half century or so has concentrated on white racism in the Western world historical accounts of race based social practices can be found across the globe 31 Thus racism can be broadly defined to encompass individual and group prejudices and acts of discrimination that result in material and cultural advantages conferred on a majority or a dominant social group 32 So called white racism focuses on societies in which white populations are the majority or the dominant social group In studies of these majority white societies the aggregate of material and cultural advantages is usually termed white privilege Race and race relations are prominent areas of study in sociology and economics Much of the sociological literature focuses on white racism Some of the earliest sociological works on racism were penned by sociologist W E B Du Bois the first African American to earn a doctoral degree from Harvard University Du Bois wrote t he problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color line 33 Wellman 1993 defines racism as culturally sanctioned beliefs which regardless of intentions involved defend the advantages whites have because of the subordinated position of racial minorities 34 In both sociology and economics the outcomes of racist actions are often measured by the inequality in income wealth net worth and access to other cultural resources such as education between racial groups 35 In sociology and social psychology racial identity and the acquisition of that identity is often used as a variable in racism studies Racial ideologies and racial identity affect individuals perception of race and discrimination Cazenave and Maddern 1999 define racism as a highly organized system of race based group privilege that operates at every level of society and is held together by a sophisticated ideology of color race supremacy Racial centrality the extent to which a culture recognizes individuals racial identity appears to affect the degree of discrimination African American young adults perceive whereas racial ideology may buffer the detrimental emotional effects of that discrimination 36 Sellers and Shelton 2003 found that a relationship between racial discrimination and emotional distress was moderated by racial ideology and social beliefs 37 Some sociologists also argue that particularly in the West where racism is often negatively sanctioned in society racism has changed from being a blatant to a more covert expression of racial prejudice The newer more hidden and less easily detectable forms of racism which can be considered embedded in social processes and structures are more difficult to explore and challenge It has been suggested that while in many countries overt or explicit racism has become increasingly taboo even among those who display egalitarian explicit attitudes an implicit or aversive racism is still maintained subconsciously 38 This process has been studied extensively in social psychology as implicit associations and implicit attitudes a component of implicit cognition Implicit attitudes are evaluations that occur without conscious awareness towards an attitude object or the self These evaluations are generally either favorable or unfavorable They come about from various influences in the individual experience 39 Implicit attitudes are not consciously identified or they are inaccurately identified traces of past experience that mediate favorable or unfavorable feelings thoughts or actions towards social objects 38 These feelings thoughts or actions have an influence on behavior of which the individual may not be aware 40 Therefore subconscious racism can influence our visual processing and how our minds work when we are subliminally exposed to faces of different colors In thinking about crime for example social psychologist Jennifer L Eberhardt 2004 of Stanford University holds that blackness is so associated with crime you re ready to pick out these crime objects 41 Such exposures influence our minds and they can cause subconscious racism in our behavior towards other people or even towards objects Thus racist thoughts and actions can arise from stereotypes and fears of which we are not aware 42 For example scientists and activists have warned that the use of the stereotype Nigerian Prince for referring to advance fee scammers is racist i e reducing Nigeria to a nation of scammers and fraudulent princes as some people still do online is a stereotype that needs to be called out 43 Humanities Language linguistics and discourse are active areas of study in the humanities along with literature and the arts Discourse analysis seeks to reveal the meaning of race and the actions of racists through careful study of the ways in which these factors of human society are described and discussed in various written and oral works For example Van Dijk 1992 examines the different ways in which descriptions of racism and racist actions are depicted by the perpetrators of such actions as well as by their victims 44 He notes that when descriptions of actions have negative implications for the majority and especially for white elites they are often seen as controversial and such controversial interpretations are typically marked with quotation marks or they are greeted with expressions of distance or doubt The previously cited book The Souls of Black Folk by W E B Du Bois represents early African American literature that describes the author s experiences with racism when he was traveling in the South as an African American Much American fictional literature has focused on issues of racism and the black racial experience in the US including works written by whites such as Uncle Tom s Cabin To Kill a Mockingbird and Imitation of Life or even the non fiction work Black Like Me These books and others like them feed into what has been called the white savior narrative in film in which the heroes and heroines are white even though the story is about things that happen to black characters Textual analysis of such writings can contrast sharply with black authors descriptions of African Americans and their experiences in US society African American writers have sometimes been portrayed in African American studies as retreating from racial issues when they write about whiteness while others identify this as an African American literary tradition called the literature of white estrangement part of a multi pronged effort to challenge and dismantle white supremacy in the US 45 Popular usage According to dictionaries the word is commonly used to describe prejudice and discrimination based on race 46 47 Racism can also be said to describe a condition in society in which a dominant racial group benefits from the oppression of others whether that group wants such benefits or not 48 Foucauldian scholar Ladelle McWhorter in her 2009 book Racism and Sexual Oppression in Anglo America A Genealogy posits modern racism similarly focusing on the notion of a dominant group usually whites vying for racial purity and progress rather than an overt or obvious ideology focused on the oppression of nonwhites 49 In popular usage as in some academic usage little distinction is made between racism and ethnocentrism Often the two are listed together as racial and ethnic in describing some action or outcome that is associated with prejudice within a majority or dominant group in society Furthermore the meaning of the term racism is often conflated with the terms prejudice bigotry and discrimination Racism is a complex concept that can involve each of those but it cannot be equated with nor is it synonymous with these other terms citation needed The term is often used in relation to what is seen as prejudice within a minority or subjugated group as in the concept of reverse racism Reverse racism is a concept often used to describe acts of discrimination or hostility against members of a dominant racial or ethnic group while favoring members of minority groups 50 51 This concept has been used especially in the United States in debates over color conscious policies such as affirmative action intended to remedy racial inequalities 52 However many experts and other commenters view reverse racism as a myth rather than a reality 53 54 55 56 Scholars commonly define racism not only in terms of individual prejudice but also in terms of a power structure that protects the interests of the dominant culture and actively discriminates against ethnic minorities 50 51 From this perspective while members of ethnic minorities may be prejudiced against members of the dominant culture they lack the political and economic power to actively oppress them and they are therefore not practicing racism 1 50 57 AspectsThe examples and perspective in this section deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The ideology underlying racism can manifest in many aspects of social life Such aspects are described in this section although the list is not exhaustive Aversive racism Main article Aversive racism Aversive racism is a form of implicit racism in which a person s unconscious negative evaluations of racial or ethnic minorities are realized by a persistent avoidance of interaction with other racial and ethnic groups As opposed to traditional overt racism which is characterized by overt hatred for and explicit discrimination against racial ethnic minorities aversive racism is characterized by more complex ambivalent expressions and attitudes 58 Aversive racism is similar in implications to the concept of symbolic or modern racism described below which is also a form of implicit unconscious or covert attitude which results in unconscious forms of discrimination The term was coined by Joel Kovel to describe the subtle racial behaviors of any ethnic or racial group who rationalize their aversion to a particular group by appeal to rules or stereotypes 58 People who behave in an aversively racial way may profess egalitarian beliefs and will often deny their racially motivated behavior nevertheless they change their behavior when dealing with a member of another race or ethnic group than the one they belong to The motivation for the change is thought to be implicit or subconscious Experiments have provided empirical support for the existence of aversive racism Aversive racism has been shown to have potentially serious implications for decision making in employment in legal decisions and in helping behavior 59 60 Color blindness Main article Color blindness race In relation to racism color blindness is the disregard of racial characteristics in social interaction for example in the rejection of affirmative action as a way to address the results of past patterns of discrimination Critics of this attitude argue that by refusing to attend to racial disparities racial color blindness in fact unconsciously perpetuates the patterns that produce racial inequality 61 Eduardo Bonilla Silva argues that color blind racism arises from an abstract liberalism biologization of culture naturalization of racial matters and minimization of racism 62 Color blind practices are subtle institutional and apparently nonracial 63 because race is explicitly ignored in decision making If race is disregarded in predominantly white populations for example whiteness becomes the normative standard whereas people of color are othered and the racism these individuals experience may be minimized or erased 64 65 At an individual level people with color blind prejudice reject racist ideology but also reject systemic policies intended to fix institutional racism 65 Cultural See also Cultural racism and Xenophobia Cultural racism manifests as societal beliefs and customs that promote the assumption that the products of a given culture including the language and traditions of that culture are superior to those of other cultures It shares a great deal with xenophobia which is often characterized by fear of or aggression toward members of an outgroup by members of an ingroup citation needed In that sense it is also similar to communalism as used in South Asia 66 Cultural racism exists when there is a widespread acceptance of stereotypes concerning diverse ethnic or population groups 67 Whereas racism can be characterised by the belief that one race is inherently superior to another cultural racism can be characterised by the belief that one culture is inherently superior to another 68 Economic Further information Racial wage gap in the United States and Racial wealth gap in the United States Historical economic or social disparity is alleged to be a form of discrimination caused by past racism and historical reasons affecting the present generation through deficits in the formal education and kinds of preparation in previous generations and through primarily unconscious racist attitudes and actions on members of the general population Economic discrimination may lead to choices that perpetuate racism For example color photographic film was tuned for white skin 69 as are automatic soap dispensers 70 and facial recognition systems 71 In 2011 Bank of America agreed to pay 335 million to settle a federal government claim that its mortgage division Countrywide Financial discriminated against black and Hispanic homebuyers 72 Institutional Further information Institutional racism Structural racism State racism Racial profiling and Racism by country African American university student Vivian Malone entering the University of Alabama in the U S to register for classes as one of the first African American students to attend the institution Until 1963 the university was racially segregated and African American students were not allowed to attend Institutional racism also known as structural racism state racism or systemic racism is racial discrimination by governments corporations religions or educational institutions or other large organizations with the power to influence the lives of many individuals Stokely Carmichael is credited for coining the phrase institutional racism in the late 1960s He defined the term as the collective failure of an organization to provide an appropriate and professional service to people because of their colour culture or ethnic origin 73 Maulana Karenga argued that racism constituted the destruction of culture language religion and human possibility and that the effects of racism were the morally monstrous destruction of human possibility involved redefining African humanity to the world poisoning past present and future relations with others who only know us through this stereotyping and thus damaging the truly human relations among peoples 74 Othering Main article Othering Othering is the term used by some to describe a system of discrimination whereby the characteristics of a group are used to distinguish them as separate from the norm 75 Othering plays a fundamental role in the history and continuation of racism To objectify a culture as something different exotic or underdeveloped is to generalize that it is not like normal society Europe s colonial attitude towards the Orientals exemplifies this as it was thought that the East was the opposite of the West feminine where the West was masculine weak where the West was strong and traditional where the West was progressive 76 By making these generalizations and othering the East Europe was simultaneously defining herself as the norm further entrenching the gap 77 Much of the process of othering relies on imagined difference or the expectation of difference Spatial difference can be enough to conclude that we are here and the others are over there 76 Imagined differences serve to categorize people into groups and assign them characteristics that suit the imaginer s expectations 78 Racial discrimination Main article Racial discrimination Racial discrimination refers to discrimination against someone on the basis of their race Racial segregation Main article Racial segregation External video James A White Sr The little problem I had renting a house TED Talks 14 20 February 20 2015Racial segregation is the separation of humans into socially constructed racial groups in daily life It may apply to activities such as eating in a restaurant drinking from a water fountain using a bathroom attending school going to the movies or in the rental or purchase of a home 79 Segregation is generally outlawed but may exist through social norms even when there is no strong individual preference for it as suggested by Thomas Schelling s models of segregation and subsequent work Supremacism Main article Supremacism In 1899 Uncle Sam a personification of the United States balances his new possessions which are depicted as savage children The figures are Puerto Rico Hawaii Cuba Philippines and Ladrones the Mariana Islands Centuries of European colonialism in the Americas Africa and Asia were often justified by white supremacist attitudes 80 During the early 20th century the phrase The White Man s Burden was widely used to justify an imperialist policy as a noble enterprise 81 82 A justification for the policy of conquest and subjugation of Native Americans emanated from the stereotyped perceptions of the indigenous people as merciless Indian savages as they are described in the United States Declaration of Independence 83 Sam Wolfson of The Guardian writes that the declaration s passage has often been cited as an encapsulation of the dehumanizing attitude toward indigenous Americans that the US was founded on 84 In an 1890 article about colonial expansion onto Native American land author L Frank Baum wrote The Whites by law of conquest by justice of civilization are masters of the American continent and the best safety of the frontier settlements will be secured by the total annihilation of the few remaining Indians 85 In his Notes on the State of Virginia published in 1785 Thomas Jefferson wrote blacks whether originally a distinct race or made distinct by time or circumstances are inferior to the whites in the endowments of both body and mind 86 Attitudes of black supremacy Arab supremacy and East Asian supremacy also exist Symbolic modern Main article Symbolic racism A rally against school integration in Little Rock Arkansas 1959 Some scholars argue that in the US earlier violent and aggressive forms of racism have evolved into a more subtle form of prejudice in the late 20th century This new form of racism is sometimes referred to as modern racism and it is characterized by outwardly acting unprejudiced while inwardly maintaining prejudiced attitudes displaying subtle prejudiced behaviors such as actions informed by attributing qualities to others based on racial stereotypes and evaluating the same behavior differently based on the race of the person being evaluated 87 This view is based on studies of prejudice and discriminatory behavior where some people will act ambivalently towards black people with positive reactions in certain more public contexts but more negative views and expressions in more private contexts This ambivalence may also be visible for example in hiring decisions where job candidates that are otherwise positively evaluated may be unconsciously disfavored by employers in the final decision because of their race 88 89 90 Some scholars consider modern racism to be characterized by an explicit rejection of stereotypes combined with resistance to changing structures of discrimination for reasons that are ostensibly non racial an ideology that considers opportunity at a purely individual basis denying the relevance of race in determining individual opportunities and the exhibition of indirect forms of micro aggression toward and or avoidance of people of other races 91 Subconscious biases Main article Implicit bias Racial bias Recent research has shown that individuals who consciously claim to reject racism may still exhibit race based subconscious biases in their decision making processes While such subconscious racial biases do not fully fit the definition of racism their impact can be similar though typically less pronounced not being explicit conscious or deliberate 92 International law and racial discriminationIn 1919 a proposal to include a racial equality provision in the Covenant of the League of Nations was supported by a majority but not adopted in the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 In 1943 Japan and its allies declared work for the abolition of racial discrimination to be their aim at the Greater East Asia Conference 93 Article 1 of the 1945 UN Charter includes promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race as UN purpose In 1950 UNESCO suggested in The Race Question a statement signed by 21 scholars such as Ashley Montagu Claude Levi Strauss Gunnar Myrdal Julian Huxley etc to drop the term race altogether and instead speak of ethnic groups The statement condemned scientific racism theories that had played a role in the Holocaust It aimed both at debunking scientific racist theories by popularizing modern knowledge concerning the race question and morally condemned racism as contrary to the philosophy of the Enlightenment and its assumption of equal rights for all Along with Myrdal s An American Dilemma The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy 1944 The Race Question influenced the 1954 U S Supreme Court desegregation decision in Brown v Board of Education 94 Also in 1950 the European Convention on Human Rights was adopted which was widely used on racial discrimination issues 95 The United Nations use the definition of racial discrimination laid out in the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination adopted in 1966 96 any distinction exclusion restriction or preference based on race color descent or national or ethnic origin that has the purpose or effect of nullifying or impairing the recognition enjoyment or exercise on an equal footing of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political economic social cultural or any other field of public life Part 1 of Article 1 of the U N International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination In 2001 the European Union explicitly banned racism along with many other forms of social discrimination in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union the legal effect of which if any would necessarily be limited to Institutions of the European Union Article 21 of the charter prohibits discrimination on any ground such as race color ethnic or social origin genetic features language religion or belief political or any other opinion membership of a national minority property disability age or sexual orientation and also discrimination on the grounds of nationality 97 Ideology A pro Hiester Clymer racist political campaign poster from the 1866 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election Racism existed during the 19th century as scientific racism which attempted to provide a racial classification of humanity 98 In 1775 Johann Blumenbach divided the world s population into five groups according to skin color Caucasians Mongols etc positing the view that the non Caucasians had arisen through a process of degeneration Another early view in scientific racism was the polygenist view which held that the different races had been separately created Polygenist Christoph Meiners for example split mankind into two divisions which he labeled the beautiful White race and the ugly Black race In Meiners book The Outline of History of Mankind he claimed that a main characteristic of race is either beauty or ugliness He viewed only the white race as beautiful He considered ugly races to be inferior immoral and animal like Anders Retzius demonstrated that neither Europeans nor others are one pure race but of mixed origins While discredited derivations of Blumenbach s taxonomy are still widely used for the classification of the population in the United States Hans Peder Steensby while strongly emphasizing that all humans today are of mixed origins in 1907 claimed that the origins of human differences must be traced extraordinarily far back in time and conjectured that the purest race today would be the Australian Aboriginals 99 A sign on a racially segregated beach during Apartheid in South Africa stating that the area is for the sole use of members of the white race group Scientific racism fell strongly out of favor in the early 20th century but the origins of fundamental human and societal differences are still researched within academia in fields such as human genetics including paleogenetics social anthropology comparative politics history of religions history of ideas prehistory history ethics and psychiatry There is widespread rejection of any methodology based on anything similar to Blumenbach s races It is more unclear to which extent and when ethnic and national stereotypes are accepted Although after World War II and the Holocaust racist ideologies were discredited on ethical political and scientific grounds racism and racial discrimination have remained widespread around the world Du Bois observed that it is not so much race that we think about but culture a common history common laws and religion similar habits of thought and a conscious striving together for certain ideals of life 100 Late 19th century nationalists were the first to embrace contemporary discourses on race ethnicity and survival of the fittest to shape new nationalist doctrines Ultimately race came to represent not only the most important traits of the human body but was also regarded as decisively shaping the character and personality of the nation 101 According to this view culture is the physical manifestation created by ethnic groupings as such fully determined by racial characteristics Culture and race became considered intertwined and dependent upon each other sometimes even to the extent of including nationality or language to the set of definition Pureness of race tended to be related to rather superficial characteristics that were easily addressed and advertised such as blondness Racial qualities tended to be related to nationality and language rather than the actual geographic distribution of racial characteristics In the case of Nordicism the denomination Germanic was equivalent to superiority of race Bolstered by some nationalist and ethnocentric values and achievements of choice this concept of racial superiority evolved to distinguish from other cultures that were considered inferior or impure This emphasis on culture corresponds to the modern mainstream definition of racism r acism does not originate from the existence of races It creates them through a process of social division into categories anybody can be racialised independently of their somatic cultural religious differences 102 This definition explicitly ignores the biological concept of race which is still subject to scientific debate In the words of David C Rowe a racial concept although sometimes in the guise of another name will remain in use in biology and in other fields because scientists as well as lay persons are fascinated by human diversity some of which is captured by race 103 Racial prejudice became subject to international legislation For instance the Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on November 20 1963 addresses racial prejudice explicitly next to discrimination for reasons of race colour or ethnic origin Article I 104 Ethnicity and ethnic conflictsFurther information Ethnicity A mass grave being dug for frozen bodies from the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre in which the U S Army killed 150 Lakota people marking the end of the American Indian Wars Debates over the origins of racism often suffer from a lack of clarity over the term Many use the term racism to refer to more general phenomena such as xenophobia and ethnocentrism although scholars attempt to clearly distinguish those phenomena from racism as an ideology or from scientific racism which has little to do with ordinary xenophobia Others conflate recent forms of racism with earlier forms of ethnic and national conflict In most cases ethno national conflict seems to owe itself to conflict over land and strategic resources In some cases ethnicity and nationalism were harnessed in order to rally combatants in wars between great religious empires for example the Muslim Turks and the Catholic Austro Hungarians Notions of race and racism have often played central roles in ethnic conflicts Throughout history when an adversary is identified as other based on notions of race or ethnicity in particular when other is interpreted to mean inferior the means employed by the self presumed superior party to appropriate territory human chattel or material wealth often have been more ruthless more brutal and less constrained by moral or ethical considerations According to historian Daniel Richter Pontiac s Rebellion saw the emergence on both sides of the conflict of the novel idea that all Native people were Indians that all Euro Americans were Whites and that all on one side must unite to destroy the other 105 Basil Davidson states in his documentary Africa Different but Equal that racism in fact only just recently surfaced as late as the 19th century due to the need for a justification for slavery in the Americas Historically racism was a major driving force behind the Transatlantic slave trade 106 It was also a major force behind racial segregation especially in the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and South Africa under apartheid 19th and 20th century racism in the Western world is particularly well documented and constitutes a reference point in studies and discourses about racism 7 Racism has played a role in genocides such as the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust and colonial projects like the European colonization of the Americas Africa and Asia Indigenous peoples have been and are often subject to racist attitudes Practices and ideologies of racism are condemned by the United Nations in the Declaration of Human Rights 107 Ethnic and racial nationalism Further information Ethnic nationalism Racial nationalism and Romantic nationalism A 1917 anti conscription propaganda leaflet imploring voters to keep Australia white A horde of Asians bearing a dragon flag is shown to the north After the Napoleonic Wars Europe was confronted with the new nationalities question leading to reconfigurations of the European map on which the frontiers between the states had been delineated during the 1648 Peace of Westphalia Nationalism had made its first appearance with the invention of the levee en masse by the French Revolutionaries thus inventing mass conscription in order to be able to defend the newly founded Republic against the Ancien Regime order represented by the European monarchies This led to the French Revolutionary Wars 1792 1802 and then to the conquests of Napoleon and to the subsequent European wide debates on the concepts and realities of nations and in particular of nation states The Westphalia Treaty had divided Europe into various empires and kingdoms such as the Ottoman Empire the Holy Roman Empire the Swedish Empire the Kingdom of France etc and for centuries wars were waged between princes Kabinettskriege in German Modern nation states appeared in the wake of the French Revolution with the formation of patriotic sentiments for the first time in Spain during the Peninsula War 1808 1813 known in Spain as the Independence War Despite the restoration of the previous order with the 1815 Congress of Vienna the nationalities question became the main problem of Europe during the Industrial Era leading in particular to the 1848 Revolutions the Italian unification completed during the 1871 Franco Prussian War which itself culminated in the proclamation of the German Empire in the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles thus achieving the German unification Meanwhile the Ottoman Empire the sick man of Europe was confronted with endless nationalist movements which along with the dissolving of the Austrian Hungarian Empire would lead to the creation after World War I of the various nation states of the Balkans with national minorities in their borders 108 Ethnic nationalism which advocated the belief in a hereditary membership of the nation made its appearance in the historical context surrounding the creation of the modern nation states One of its main influences was the Romantic nationalist movement at the turn of the 19th century represented by figures such as Johann Herder 1744 1803 Johan Fichte 1762 1814 in the Addresses to the German Nation 1808 Friedrich Hegel 1770 1831 or also in France Jules Michelet 1798 1874 It was opposed to liberal nationalism represented by authors such as Ernest Renan 1823 1892 who conceived of the nation as a community which instead of being based on the Volk ethnic group and on a specific common language was founded on the subjective will to live together the nation is a daily plebiscite 1882 or also John Stuart Mill 1806 1873 109 Ethnic nationalism blended with scientific racist discourses as well as with continental imperialist Hannah Arendt 1951 110 discourses for example in the pan Germanism discourses which postulated the racial superiority of the German Volk people folk The Pan German League Alldeutscher Verband created in 1891 promoted German imperialism and racial hygiene and was opposed to intermarriage with Jews Another popular current the Volkisch movement was also an important proponent of the German ethnic nationalist discourse and it combined Pan Germanism with modern racial antisemitism Members of the Volkisch movement in particular the Thule Society would participate in the founding of the German Workers Party DAP in Munich in 1918 the predecessor of the Nazi Party Pan Germanism played a decisive role in the interwar period of the 1920s 1930s 110 These currents began to associate the idea of the nation with the biological concept of a master race often the Aryan race or the Nordic race issued from the scientific racist discourse They conflated nationalities with ethnic groups called races in a radical distinction from previous racial discourses that posited the existence of a race struggle inside the nation and the state itself Furthermore they believed that political boundaries should mirror these alleged racial and ethnic groups thus justifying ethnic cleansing in order to achieve racial purity and also to achieve ethnic homogeneity in the nation state Such racist discourses combined with nationalism were not however limited to pan Germanism In France the transition from Republican liberal nationalism to ethnic nationalism which made nationalism a characteristic of far right movements in France took place during the Dreyfus Affair at the end of the 19th century During several years a nationwide crisis affected French society concerning the alleged treason of Alfred Dreyfus a French Jewish military officer The country polarized itself into two opposite camps one represented by Emile Zola who wrote J Accuse in defense of Alfred Dreyfus and the other represented by the nationalist poet Maurice Barres 1862 1923 one of the founders of the ethnic nationalist discourse in France 111 At the same time Charles Maurras 1868 1952 founder of the monarchist Action francaise movement theorized the anti France composed of the four confederate states of Protestants Jews Freemasons and foreigners his actual word for the latter being the pejorative meteques Indeed to him the first three were all internal foreigners who threatened the ethnic unity of the French people History History of racism redirects here For racism concept in history see historical race concepts Ethnocentrism and proto racism The Book of Genesis s biblical curse on Canaan which was often misinterpreted as a curse on his father Ham was used to justify slavery in 19th century America 112 Aristotle Bernard Lewis has cited the Greek philosopher Aristotle who in his discussion of slavery stated that while Greeks are free by nature barbarians non Greeks are slaves by nature in that it is in their nature to be more willing to submit to a despotic government 113 Though Aristotle does not specify any particular races he argues that people from nations outside Greece are more prone to the burden of slavery than those from Greece 114 While Aristotle makes remarks about the most natural slaves being those with strong bodies and slave souls unfit for rule unintelligent which would seem to imply a physical basis for discrimination he also explicitly states that the right kind of souls and bodies do not always go together implying that the greatest determinate for inferiority and natural slaves versus natural masters is the soul not the body 115 This proto racism is seen as an important precursor to modern racism by classicist Benjamin Isaac Such proto racism and ethnocentrism must be looked at within context because a modern understanding of racism based on hereditary inferiority with modern racism based on eugenics and scientific racism was not yet developed and it is unclear whether Aristotle believed the natural inferiority of Barbarians was caused by environment and climate like many of his contemporaries or by birth 116 Historian Dante A Puzzo in his discussion of Aristotle racism and the ancient world writes that 117 Racism rests on two basic assumptions that a correlation exists between physical characteristics and moral qualities that mankind is divisible into superior and inferior stocks Racism thus defined is a modern conception for prior to the XVIth century there was virtually nothing in the life and thought of the West that can be described as racist To prevent misunderstanding a clear distinction must be made between racism and ethnocentrism The Ancient Hebrews in referring to all who were not Hebrews as Gentiles were indulging in ethnocentrism not in racism So it was with the Hellenes who denominated all non Hellenes whether the wild Scythians or the Egyptians whom they acknowledged as their mentors in the arts of civilization Barbarians the term denoting that which was strange or foreign Medieval Arab writers See also Medieval Arab attitudes to Black people Bernard Lewis has also cited historians and geographers of the Middle East and North Africa region 118 including Al Muqaddasi Al Jahiz Al Masudi Abu Rayhan Biruni Nasir al Din al Tusi and Ibn Qutaybah 118 Though the Qur an expresses no racial prejudice Lewis argues that ethnocentric prejudice later developed among Arabs for a variety of reasons 118 their extensive conquests and slave trade the influence of Aristotelian ideas regarding slavery which some Muslim philosophers directed towards Zanj Bantu 119 and Turkic peoples 113 and the influence of Judeo Christian ideas regarding divisions among humankind 120 By the eighth century anti black prejudice among Arabs resulted in discrimination A number of medieval Arabic authors argued against this prejudice urging respect for all black people and especially Ethiopians 121 By the 14th century a significant number of slaves came from sub Saharan Africa Lewis argues that this led to the likes of Egyptian historian Al Abshibi 1388 1446 writing that i t is said that when the black slave is sated he fornicates when he is hungry he steals 122 According to Lewis the 14th century Tunisian scholar Ibn Khaldun also wrote 118 123 beyond known peoples of black West Africa to the south there is no civilization in the proper sense There are only humans who are closer to dumb animals than to rational beings They live in thickets and caves and eat herbs and unprepared grain They frequently eat each other They cannot be considered human beings Therefore the Negro nations are as a rule submissive to slavery because Negroes have little that is essentially human and possess attributes that are quite similar to those of dumb animals as we have stated According to Wesleyan University professor Abdelmajid Hannoum French Orientalists projected racist and colonialist views of the 19th century into their translations of medieval Arabic writings including those of Ibn Khaldun This resulted in the translated texts racializing Arabs and Berber people when no such distinction was made in the originals 124 James E Lindsay argues that the concept of an Arab identity itself did not exist until modern times 125 though others like Robert Hoyland have argued that a common sense of Arab identity already existed by the 9th century 126 Limpieza de sangre Further information Limpieza de sangre With the Umayyad Caliphate s conquest of Hispania Muslim Arabs and Berbers overthrew the previous Visigothic rulers and created Al Andalus 127 which contributed to the Golden age of Jewish culture and lasted for six centuries 128 It was followed by the centuries long Reconquista 129 during which Christian Iberian kingdoms contested Al Andalus and progressively conquered the divided Muslim kingdoms culminating in the fall of the Nasrid kingdom of Granada in 1492 and the rise of Ferdinand V and Isabella I as Catholic monarchs of Spain The legacy Catholic Spaniards then formulated the limpieza de sangre cleanliness of blood doctrine It was during this time in history that the Western concept of aristocratic blue blood emerged in a racialized religious and feudal context 130 so as to stem the upward social mobility of the converted New Christians Robert Lacey explains 131 It was the Spaniards who gave the world the notion that an aristocrat s blood is not red but blue The Spanish nobility started taking shape around the ninth century in classic military fashion occupying land as warriors on horseback They were to continue the process for more than five hundred years clawing back sections of the peninsula from its Moorish occupiers and a nobleman demonstrated his pedigree by holding up his sword arm to display the filigree of blue blooded veins beneath his pale skin proof that his birth had not been contaminated by the dark skinned enemy Sangre azul blue blood was thus a euphemism for being a white man Spain s own particular reminder that the refined footsteps of the aristocracy through history carry the rather less refined spoor of racism Following the expulsion of the Arabic Moors and most of the Sephardic Jews from the Iberian peninsula the remaining Jews and Muslims were forced to convert to Roman Catholicism becoming New Christians who were sometimes discriminated against by the Old Christians in some cities including Toledo despite condemnations by the Church and the State which both welcomed the new flock 130 The Inquisition was carried out by members of the Dominican Order in order to weed out the converts who still practiced Judaism and Islam in secret The system and ideology of the limpieza de sangre ostracized false Christian converts from society in order to protect it against treason 132 The remnants of such legislation persevered into the 19th century in military contexts 133 In Portugal the legal distinction between New and Old Christian was only ended through a legal decree issued by the Marquis of Pombal in 1772 almost three centuries after the implementation of the racist discrimination The limpieza de sangre legislation was common also during the colonization of the Americas where it led to the racial and feudal separation of peoples and social strata in the colonies It was however often ignored in practice as the new colonies needed skilled people 134 A 16th century illustration by Flemish Protestant Theodor de Bry for Las Casas s Brevisima relacion de la destruccion de las Indias depicting Spanish atrocities during the conquest of Cuba At the end of the Renaissance the Valladolid debate 1550 1551 concerning the treatment of the natives of the New World pitted the Dominican friar and Bishop of Chiapas Bartolome de Las Casas to another Dominican and Humanist philosopher Juan Gines de Sepulveda The latter argued that the Indians practiced human sacrifice of innocents cannibalism and other such crimes against nature they were unacceptable and should be suppressed by any means possible including war 135 thus reducing them to slavery or serfdom was in accordance with Catholic theology and natural law To the contrary Bartolome de Las Casas argued that the Amerindians were free men in the natural order and deserved the same treatment as others according to Catholic theology It was one of the many controversies concerning racism slavery religion and European morality that would arise in the following centuries and which resulted in the legislation protecting the natives 136 The marriage between Luisa de Abrego a free black domestic servant from Seville and Miguel Rodriguez a white segovian conquistador in 1565 in St Augustine Spanish Florida is the first known and recorded Christian marriage anywhere in the continental United States 137 In the Spanish colonies Spaniards developed a complex caste system based on race which was used for social control and which also determined a person s importance in society 138 While many Latin American countries have long since rendered the system officially illegal through legislation usually at the time of their independence prejudice based on degrees of perceived racial distance from European ancestry combined with one s socioeconomic status remain an echo of the colonial caste system 139 Racism as a modern phenomenon Although antisemitism has a long history related to Christianity and native Egyptian or Greek religions 140 anti Judaism racism itself is sometimes described as a modern phenomenon In the view of the French philosopher and historian Michel Foucault the first formulation of racism emerged in the Early Modern period as the discourse of race struggle and a historical and political discourse which Foucault opposed to the philosophical and juridical discourse of sovereignty 141 On the other hand e g Chinese self identification as a yellow race predated such European racial concepts citation needed This European analysis which first appeared in Great Britain was then carried on in France by such people as Boulainvilliers Nicolas Freret and then during the 1789 French Revolution Sieyes and afterwards Augustin Thierry and Cournot Boulainvilliers who created the matrix of such racist discourse in medieval France conceived of the race as being something closer to the sense of a nation that is in his time the race meant the people He conceived of France as being divided between various nations the unified nation state is an anachronism here which themselves formed different races Boulainvilliers opposed the absolute monarchy which tried to bypass the aristocracy by establishing a direct relationship to the Third Estate Thus he developed the theory that the French aristocrats were the descendants of foreign invaders whom he called the Franks while according to him the Third Estate constituted the autochthonous vanquished Gallo Romans who were dominated by the Frankish aristocracy as a consequence of the right of conquest Early modern racism was opposed to nationalism and the nation state the Comte de Montlosier in exile during the French Revolution who borrowed Boulainvilliers discourse on the Nordic race as being the French aristocracy that invaded the plebeian Gauls thus showed his contempt for the Third Estate calling it this new people born of slaves mixture of all races and of all times 19th century Advertisement for Pears Soap Caption reads Matchless for the complexion Illustration of before and after use of soap by black child in the bath soap washes off his dark complexion While 19th century racism became closely intertwined with nationalism 142 leading to the ethnic nationalist discourse that identified the race with the folk leading to such movements as pan Germanism pan Turkism pan Arabism and pan Slavism medieval racism precisely divided the nation into various non biological races which were thought to be the consequence of historical conquests and social conflicts Michel Foucault traced the genealogy of modern racism to this medieval historical and political discourse of race struggle According to him it divided itself in the 19th century according to two rival lines on one hand it was incorporated by racists biologists and eugenicists who gave it the modern sense of race and they also transformed this popular discourse into a state racism e g Nazism On the other hand Marxism also seized this discourse founded on the assumption of a political struggle that provided the real engine of history and continued to act underneath the apparent peace Thus Marxists transformed the essentialist notion of race into the historical notion of class struggle defined by socially structured positions capitalist or proletarian In The Will to Knowledge 1976 Foucault analyzed another opponent of the race struggle discourse Sigmund Freud s psychoanalysis which opposed the concept of blood heredity prevalent in the 19th century racist discourse Authors such as Hannah Arendt in her 1951 book The Origins of Totalitarianism have said that the racist ideology popular racism which developed at the end of the 19th century helped legitimize the imperialist conquests of foreign territories and the atrocities that sometimes accompanied them such as the Herero and Namaqua Genocide of 1904 1907 or the Armenian genocide of 1915 1917 Rudyard Kipling s poem The White Man s Burden 1899 is one of the more famous illustrations of the belief in the inherent superiority of the European culture over the rest of the world though it is also thought to be a satirical appraisal of such imperialism Racist ideology thus helped legitimize the conquest and incorporation of foreign territories into an empire which were regarded as a humanitarian obligation partially as a result of these racist beliefs A late 19th century illustration from Ireland from One or Two Neglected Points of View by H Strickland Constable shows an alleged similarity between Irish Iberian and Negro features in contrast to the higher Anglo Teutonic However during the 19th century Western European colonial powers were involved in the suppression of the Arab slave trade in Africa 143 as well as in the suppression of the slave trade in West Africa 144 Some Europeans during the time period objected to injustices that occurred in some colonies and lobbied on behalf of aboriginal peoples Thus when the Hottentot Venus was displayed in England in the beginning of the 19th century the African Association publicly opposed itself to the exhibition The same year that Kipling published his poem Joseph Conrad published Heart of Darkness 1899 a clear criticism of the Congo Free State which was owned by Leopold II of Belgium Examples of racial theories used include the creation of the Hamitic ethno linguistic group during the European exploration of Africa It was then restricted by Karl Friedrich Lepsius 1810 1877 to non Semitic Afro Asiatic languages 145 The term Hamite was applied to different populations within North Africa mainly comprising Ethiopians Eritreans Somalis Berbers and the ancient Egyptians Hamites were regarded as Caucasoid peoples who probably originated in either Arabia or Asia on the basis of their cultural physical and linguistic similarities with the peoples of those areas 146 147 148 Europeans considered Hamites to be more civilized than Sub Saharan Africans and more akin to themselves and Semitic peoples 149 In the first two thirds of the 20th century the Hamitic race was in fact considered one of the branches of the Caucasian race along with the Indo Europeans Semites and the Mediterraneans However the Hamitic peoples themselves were often deemed to have failed as rulers which was usually ascribed to interbreeding with Negroes In the mid 20th century the German scholar Carl Meinhof 1857 1944 claimed that the Bantu race was formed by a merger of Hamitic and Negro races The Hottentots Nama or Khoi were formed by the merger of Hamitic and Bushmen San races both being termed nowadays as Khoisan peoples One in a series of posters attacking Radical Republicans on the issue of black suffrage issued during the Pennsylvania gubernatorial election of 1866 In the United States in the early 19th century the American Colonization Society was established as the primary vehicle for proposals to return black Americans to greater freedom and equality in Africa 150 The colonization effort resulted from a mixture of motives with its founder Henry Clay stating that unconquerable prejudice resulting from their color they never could amalgamate with the free whites of this country It was desirable therefore as it respected them and the residue of the population of the country to drain them off 151 Racism spread throughout the New World in the late 19th century and early 20th century Whitecapping which started in Indiana in the late 19th century soon spread throughout all of North America causing many African laborers to flee from the land they worked on In the US during the 1860s racist posters were used during election campaigns In one of these racist posters see above a black man is depicted lounging idly in the foreground as one white man ploughs his field and another chops wood Accompanying labels are In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat thy bread and The white man must work to keep his children and pay his taxes The black man wonders Whar is de use for me to work as long as dey make dese appropriations Above in a cloud is an image of the Freedman s Bureau Negro Estimate of Freedom The bureau is pictured as a large domed building resembling the U S Capitol and is inscribed Freedom and No Work Its columns and walls are labeled Candy Rum Gin Whiskey Sugar Plums Indolence White Women Apathy White Sugar Idleness and so on On June 5 1873 Sir Francis Galton distinguished English explorer and cousin of Charles Darwin wrote in a letter to The Times My proposal is to make the encouragement of Chinese settlements of Africa a part of our national policy in the belief that the Chinese immigrants would not only maintain their position but that they would multiply and their descendants supplant the inferior Negro race I should expect that the African seaboard now sparsely occupied by lazy palavering savages might in a few years be tenanted by industrious order loving Chinese living either as a semidetached dependency of China or else in perfect freedom under their own law 152 20th century Further information Racial policy of Nazi Germany Holocaust Forced settlements in the Soviet Union Apartheid Racial segregation in the United States and Rwandan genocide Austrian Nazis and local residents watch as Jews are forced to scrub the pavement Vienna March 1938 Eichmann s list of the Jewish population in Europe drafted for the Wannsee Conference held to ensure the cooperation of various levels of the Nazi government in the Final Solution The Nazi party which seized power in the 1933 German elections and maintained a dictatorship over much of Europe until the End of World War II on the European continent deemed the Germans to be part of an Aryan master race Herrenvolk who therefore had the right to expand their territory and enslave or kill members of other races deemed inferior 153 The racial ideology conceived by the Nazis graded humans on a scale of pure Aryan to non Aryan with the latter viewed as subhuman At the top of the scale of pure Aryans were Germans and other Germanic peoples including the Dutch Scandinavians and the English as well as other peoples such as some northern Italians and the French who were said to have a suitable admixture of Germanic blood 154 Nazi policies labeled Romani people people of color and Slavs mainly Poles Serbs Russians Belarusians Ukrainians and Czechs as inferior non Aryan subhumans 155 156 Jews were at the bottom of the hierarchy considered inhuman and thus unworthy of life 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 In accordance with Nazi racial ideology approximately six million Jews were killed in the Holocaust 2 5 million ethnic Poles 0 5 million ethnic Serbs and 0 2 0 5 million Romani were killed by the regime and its collaborators 163 The Nazis considered most Slavs to be non Aryan Untermenschen The Nazi Party s chief racial theorist Alfred Rosenberg adopted the term from Klansman Lothrop Stoddard s 1922 book The Revolt Against Civilization The Menace of the Under man 164 In the secret plan Generalplan Ost Master Plan East the Nazis resolved to expel enslave or exterminate most Slavic people to provide living space for Germans 165 but Nazi policy towards Slavs changed during World War II due to manpower shortages which necessitated limited Slavic participation in the Waffen SS 166 Significant war crimes were committed against Slavs particularly Poles and Soviet POWs had a far higher mortality rate than their American and British counterparts due to deliberate neglect and mistreatment Between June 1941 and January 1942 the Nazis killed an estimated 2 8 million Red Army POWs whom they viewed as subhuman 167 In the years 1943 1945 around 120 000 Polish people mostly women and children became the victims of ethnicity based massacres by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army which was then operating in the territory of occupied Poland 168 In addition to Poles who represented the vast majority of the murdered people the victims also included Jews Armenians Russians and Ukrainians who were married to Poles or attempted to help them 169 During the intensification of ties with Nazi Germany in the 1930s Ante Pavelic and the Ustase and their idea of the Croatian nation became increasingly race oriented 170 171 172 The Ustase view of national and racial identity as well as the theory of Serbs as an inferior race was influenced by Croatian nationalists and intellectuals from the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century 170 173 174 175 Serbs were primary targets of racial laws and murders in the puppet Independent State of Croatia NDH Jews and Roma were also targeted 176 The Ustase introduced laws to strip Serbs of their citizenship livelihoods and possessions 177 During the genocide in the NDH Serbs suffered among the highest casualty rates in Europe during the World War II and the NDH was one of the most lethal regimes in the 20th century 178 179 172 German praise for America s institutional racism was continuous throughout the early 1930s and Nazi lawyers were advocates of the use of American models 180 Race based U S citizenship laws and anti miscegenation laws no race mixing directly inspired the Nazi s two principal Nuremberg racial laws the Citizenship Law and the Blood Law 180 Hitler s 1925 memoir Mein Kampf was full of admiration for America s treatment of coloreds 181 Nazi expansion eastward was accompanied with invocation of America s colonial expansion westward with the accompanying actions toward the Native Americans 182 In 1928 Hitler praised Americans for having gunned down the millions of Redskins to a few hundred thousand and now keeps the modest remnant under observation in a cage 183 On Nazi Germany s expansion eastward in 1941 Hitler stated Our Mississippi the line beyond which Thomas Jefferson wanted all Indians expelled must be the Volga 182 A drinking fountain from the mid 20th century labelled Colored with an African American man drinking A sign posted above a bar that reads No beer sold to Indians Native Americans Birney Montana 1941 White supremacy was dominant in the U S from its founding up to the civil rights movement 184 On the U S immigration laws prior to 1965 sociologist Stephen Klineberg cited the law as clearly declaring that Northern Europeans are a superior subspecies of the white race 185 While anti Asian racism was embedded in U S politics and culture in the early 20th century Indians were also racialized for their anticolonialism with U S officials casting them as a Hindu menace pushing for Western imperial expansion abroad 186 The Naturalization Act of 1790 limited U S citizenship to whites only and in the 1923 case United States v Bhagat Singh Thind the Supreme Court ruled that high caste Hindus were not white persons and were therefore racially ineligible for naturalized citizenship 187 188 It was after the Luce Celler Act of 1946 that a quota of 100 Indians per year could immigrate to the U S and become citizens 189 The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 dramatically opened entry to the U S to immigrants other than traditional Northern European and Germanic groups and as a result would significantly alter the demographic mix in the U S 185 Serious race riots in Durban between Indians and Zulus erupted in 1949 190 Ne Win s rise to power in Burma in 1962 and his relentless persecution of resident aliens led to an exodus of some 300 000 Burmese Indians 191 They migrated to escape racial discrimination and wholesale nationalisation of private enterprises a few years later in 1964 192 The Zanzibar Revolution of January 12 1964 put an end to the local Arab dynasty 193 Thousands of Arabs and Indians in Zanzibar were massacred in riots and thousands more were detained or fled the island 194 In August 1972 Ugandan President Idi Amin started the expropriation of properties owned by Asians and Europeans 195 196 In the same year Amin ethnically cleansed Uganda s Asians giving them 90 days to leave the country 197 Shortly after World War II the South African National Party took control of the government in South Africa Between 1948 and 1994 the apartheid regime took place This regime based its ideology on the racial separation of whites and non whites including the unequal rights of non whites Several protests and violence occurred during the struggle against apartheid the most famous of these include the Sharpeville Massacre in 1960 the Soweto uprising in 1976 the Church Street bombing of 1983 and the Cape Town peace march of 1989 198 Contemporary On 12 September 2011 Julius Malema the youth leader of South Africa s ruling ANC was found guilty of hate speech for singing Shoot the Boer at a number of public events 199 During the Congo Civil War 1998 2003 Pygmy people were hunted down like game animals and eaten Both sides in the war regarded them as subhuman and some say their flesh can confer magical powers UN human rights activists reported in 2003 that rebels had carried out acts of cannibalism Sinafasi Makelo a representative of the Mbuti pygmies has asked the UN Security Council to recognise cannibalism as both a crime against humanity and an act of genocide 200 A report released by the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination condemns Botswana s treatment of the Bushmen as racist 201 In 2008 the tribunal of the 15 nation Southern African Development Community SADC accused Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe of having a racist attitude towards white people 202 203 The mass demonstrations and riots against African students in Nanjing China lasted from December 1988 to January 1989 204 In November 2009 British newspaper The Guardian reported that Lou Jing of mixed Chinese and African parentage had emerged as the most famous talent show contestant in China and has become the subject of intense debate because of her skin color 205 Her attention in the media opened serious debates about racism in China and racial prejudice 206 Some 70 000 black African Mauritanians were expelled from Mauritania in the late 1980s 207 In the Sudan black African captives in the civil war were often enslaved and female prisoners were often sexually abused 208 The Darfur conflict has been described by some as a racial matter 209 In October 2006 Niger announced that it would deport the approximately 150 000 210 Arabs living in the Diffa region of eastern Niger to Chad 211 While the government collected Arabs in preparation for the deportation two girls died reportedly after fleeing Government forces and three women suffered miscarriages 212 The burnt out remains of Govinda s Indian Restaurant in Fiji May 2000 The Jakarta riots of May 1998 targeted many Chinese Indonesians 213 The anti Chinese legislation was in the Indonesian constitution until 1998 Resentment against Chinese workers has led to violent confrontations in Africa 214 215 216 and Oceania 217 218 Anti Chinese rioting involving tens of thousands of people 219 broke out in Papua New Guinea in May 2009 220 Indo Fijians suffered violent attacks after the Fiji coup in 2000 221 Non indigenous citizens of Fiji are subject to discrimination 222 223 Racial divisions also exist in Guyana 224 Malaysia 225 Trinidad and Tobago 226 Madagascar 227 and South Africa 228 In Malaysia such racist state policies are codified on many levels 229 230 see Bumiputera Peter Bouckaert the Human Rights Watch s emergencies director said in an interview that racist hatred is the chief motivation behind the violence against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar 231 One form of racism in the United States was enforced racial segregation which existed until the 1960s when it was outlawed in the Civil Rights Act of 1964 It has been argued that this separation of races continues to exist de facto today in different forms such as lack of access to loans and resources or discrimination by police and other government officials 232 233 The 2016 Pew Research poll found that Italians in particular hold strong anti Romani views with 82 of Italians expressing negative opinions about Romani In Greece there are 67 in Hungary 64 in France 61 in Spain 49 in Poland 47 in the UK 45 in Sweden 42 in Germany 40 and in the Netherlands 37 that have an unfavourable view of Roma 234 A survey conducted by Harvard University found the Czech Republic Lithuania Belarus and Ukraine had the strongest racial bias against black people in Europe while Serbia Slovenia and Bosnia and Herzegovina had the weakest racial bias followed by Croatia and Ireland 235 236 Scientific racismMain article Scientific racismFurther information Unilineal evolution Drawings from Josiah C Nott and George Gliddon s Indigenous races of the earth 1857 which suggested black people ranked between white people and chimpanzees in terms of intelligence The modern biological definition of race developed in the 19th century with scientific racist theories The term scientific racism refers to the use of science to justify and support racist beliefs which goes back to the early 18th century though it gained most of its influence in the mid 19th century during the New Imperialism period Also known as academic racism such theories first needed to overcome the Church s resistance to positivist accounts of history and its support of monogenism the concept that all human beings were originated from the same ancestors in accordance with creationist accounts of history These racist theories put forth on scientific hypothesis were combined with unilineal theories of social progress which postulated the superiority of the European civilization over the rest of the world Furthermore they frequently made use of the idea of survival of the fittest a term coined by Herbert Spencer in 1864 associated with ideas of competition which were named social Darwinism in the 1940s Charles Darwin himself opposed the idea of rigid racial differences in The Descent of Man 1871 in which he argued that humans were all of one species sharing common descent He recognised racial differences as varieties of humanity and emphasised the close similarities between people of all races in mental faculties tastes dispositions and habits while still contrasting the culture of the lowest savages with European civilization 237 238 At the end of the 19th century proponents of scientific racism intertwined themselves with eugenics discourses of degeneration of the race and blood heredity citation needed Henceforth scientific racist discourses could be defined as the combination of polygenism unilinealism social Darwinism and eugenism They found their scientific legitimacy on physical anthropology anthropometry craniometry phrenology physiognomy and others now discredited disciplines in order to formulate racist prejudices Before being disqualified in the 20th century by the American school of cultural anthropology Franz Boas etc the British school of social anthropology Bronislaw Malinowski Alfred Radcliffe Brown etc the French school of ethnology Claude Levi Strauss etc as well as the discovery of the neo Darwinian synthesis such sciences in particular anthropometry were used to deduce behaviours and psychological characteristics from outward physical appearances The neo Darwinian synthesis first developed in the 1930s eventually led to a gene centered view of evolution in the 1960s According to the Human Genome Project the most complete mapping of human DNA to date indicates that there is no clear genetic basis to racial groups While some genes are more common in certain populations there are no genes that exist in all members of one population and no members of any other 239 Heredity and eugenics Further information Eugenics The first theory of eugenics was developed in 1869 by Francis Galton 1822 1911 who used the then popular concept of degeneration He applied statistics to study human differences and the alleged inheritance of intelligence foreshadowing future uses of intelligence testing by the anthropometry school Such theories were vividly described by the writer Emile Zola 1840 1902 who started publishing in 1871 a twenty novel cycle Les Rougon Macquart where he linked heredity to behavior Thus Zola described the high born Rougons as those involved in politics Son Excellence Eugene Rougon and medicine Le Docteur Pascal and the low born Macquarts as those fatally falling into alcoholism L Assommoir prostitution Nana and homicide La Bete humaine During the rise of Nazism in Germany some scientists in Western nations worked to debunk the regime s racial theories A few argued against racist ideologies and discrimination even if they believed in the alleged existence of biological races However in the fields of anthropology and biology these were minority positions until the mid 20th century 240 According to the 1950 UNESCO statement The Race Question an international project to debunk racist theories had been attempted in the mid 1930s However this project had been abandoned Thus in 1950 UNESCO declared that it had resumed up again after a lapse of fifteen years a project that the International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation has wished to carry through but that it had to abandon in deference to the appeasement policy of the pre war period The race question had become one of the pivots of Nazi ideology and policy Masaryk and Benes took the initiative of calling for a conference to re establish in the minds and consciences of men everywhere the truth about race Nazi propaganda was able to continue its baleful work unopposed by the authority of an international organisation The Third Reich s racial policies its eugenics programs and the extermination of Jews in the Holocaust as well as the Romani people in the Porrajmos the Romani Holocaust and others minorities led to a change in opinions about scientific research into race after the war citation needed Changes within scientific disciplines such as the rise of the Boasian school of anthropology in the United States contributed to this shift These theories were strongly denounced in the 1950 UNESCO statement signed by internationally renowned scholars and titled The Race Question Polygenism and racial typologies Further information Polygenism Typology anthropology and Nordicism Madison Grant s map from 1916 charting the present distribution of European races with the Nordics in red the Alpines in green and the Mediterraneans in yellow Works such as Arthur de Gobineau s An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races 1853 1855 may be considered one of the first theorizations of this new racism founded on an essentialist notion of race which opposed the former racial discourse of Boulainvilliers for example which saw in races a fundamentally historical reality which changed over time Gobineau thus attempted to frame racism within the terms of biological differences among humans giving it the legitimacy of biology Gobineau s theories would be expanded in France by Georges Vacher de Lapouge 1854 1936 s typology of races who published in 1899 The Aryan and his Social Role in which he claimed that the white Aryan race dolichocephalic was opposed to the brachycephalic race of whom the Jew was the archetype Vacher de Lapouge thus created a hierarchical classification of races in which he identified the Homo europaeus Teutonic Protestant etc the Homo alpinus Auvergnat Turkish etc and finally the Homo mediterraneus Neapolitan Andalus etc He assimilated races and social classes considering that the French upper class was a representation of the Homo europaeus while the lower class represented the Homo alpinus Applying Galton s eugenics to his theory of races Vacher de Lapouge s selectionism aimed first at achieving the annihilation of trade unionists considered to be a degenerate second creating types of man each destined to one end in order to prevent any contestation of labour conditions His anthroposociology thus aimed at blocking social conflict by establishing a fixed hierarchical social order 241 The same year William Z Ripley used identical racial classification in The Races of Europe 1899 which would have a great influence in the United States Other scientific authors include H S Chamberlain at the end of the 19th century a British citizen who naturalized himself as German because of his admiration for the Aryan race and Madison Grant a eugenicist and author of The Passing of the Great Race 1916 Madison Grant provided statistics for the Immigration Act of 1924 which severely restricted immigration of Jews Slavs and Southern Europeans who were subsequently hindered in seeking to escape Nazi Germany 242 Human zoos Human zoos called People Shows were an important means of bolstering popular racism by connecting it to scientific racism they were both objects of public curiosity and of anthropology and anthropometry 243 244 Joice Heth an African American slave was displayed by P T Barnum in 1836 a few years after the exhibition of Saartjie Baartman the Hottentot Venus in England Such exhibitions became common in the New Imperialism period and remained so until World War II Carl Hagenbeck inventor of the modern zoos exhibited animals beside humans who were considered savages 245 246 Congolese pygmy Ota Benga was displayed in 1906 by eugenicist Madison Grant head of the Bronx Zoo as an attempt to illustrate the missing link between humans and orangutans thus racism was tied to Darwinism creating a social Darwinist ideology that tried to ground itself in Darwin s scientific discoveries The 1931 Paris Colonial Exhibition displayed Kanaks from New Caledonia 247 A Congolese village was on display as late as 1958 at the Brussels World Fair Theories about the origins of racismSee also Ethnocentrism and Tribalism Sociological model of ethnic and racial conflict Evolutionary psychologists John Tooby and Leda Cosmides were puzzled by the fact that in the US race is one of the three characteristics most often used in brief descriptions of individuals the others are age and sex They reasoned that natural selection would not have favoured the evolution of an instinct for using race as a classification because for most of human history humans almost never encountered members of other races Tooby and Cosmides hypothesized that modern people use race as a proxy rough and ready indicator for coalition membership since a better than random guess about which side another person is on will be helpful if one does not actually know in advance Their colleague Robert Kurzban designed an experiment whose results appeared to support this hypothesis Using the memory confusion protocol they presented subjects with pictures of individuals and sentences allegedly spoken by these individuals which presented two sides of a debate The errors that the subjects made in recalling who said what indicated that they sometimes mis attributed a statement to a speaker of the same race as the correct speaker although they also sometimes mis attributed a statement to a speaker on the same side as the correct speaker In a second run of the experiment the team also distinguished the sides in the debate by clothing of similar colors and in this case the effect of racial similarity in causing mistakes almost vanished being replaced by the color of their clothing In other words the first group of subjects with no clues from clothing used race as a visual guide to guessing who was on which side of the debate the second group of subjects used the clothing color as their main visual clue and the effect of race became very small 248 Some research suggests that ethnocentric thinking may have actually contributed to the development of cooperation Political scientists Ross Hammond and Robert Axelrod created a computer simulation wherein virtual individuals were randomly assigned one of a variety of skin colors and then one of a variety of trading strategies be color blind favor those of your own color or favor those of other colors They found that the ethnocentric individuals clustered together then grew until all the non ethnocentric individuals were wiped out 249 In The Selfish Gene evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins writes that Blood feuds and inter clan warfare are easily interpretable in terms of Hamilton s genetic theory Dawkins writes that racial prejudice while not evolutionarily adaptive could be interpreted as an irrational generalization of a kin selected tendency to identify with individuals physically resembling oneself and to be nasty to individuals different in appearance 250 Simulation based experiments in evolutionary game theory have attempted to provide an explanation for the selection of ethnocentric strategy phenotypes 251 Despite support for evolutionary theories relating to an innate origin of racism various studies have suggested racism is associated with lower intelligence and less diverse peer groups during childhood A neuroimaging study on amygdala activity during racial matching activities found increased activity to be associated with adolescent age as well as less racially diverse peer groups which the author conclude suggest a learned aspect of racism 252 A meta analysis of neuroimaging studies found amygdala activity correlated to increased scores on implicit measures of racial bias It was also argued amygdala activity in response to racial stimuli represents increased threat perception rather than the traditional theory of the amygdala activity represented ingroup outgroup processing 253 Racism has also been associated with lower childhood IQ in an analysis of 15 000 people in the UK 254 State sponsored racismMain articles Nazism and race Racial policy of Nazi Germany Racial antisemitism Eugenics in Showa Japan Apartheid in South Africa Racial segregation in the United States Ketuanan Melayu Anti Chinese legislation in Indonesia and White Australia policy Separate white and colored entrances to a cafe in North Carolina 1940 1935 Chart from Nazi Germany used to explain the Nuremberg Laws defining which Germans were to be considered Jews and stripped of their citizenship Germans with three or more Jewish grandparents were defined as Jews Germans with one or two Jewish grandparents were deemed Mischling mixed blood State racism the institutions and practices of a nation state that are grounded in racist ideology has played a major role in all instances of settler colonialism from the United States to Australia citation needed It also played a prominent role in the Nazi German regime in fascist regimes throughout Europe and during the early years of Japan s Shōwa period These governments advocated and implemented ideologies and policies that were racist xenophobic and in the case of Nazism genocidal 255 256 The Nuremberg Race Laws of 1935 prohibited sexual relations between any Aryan and Jew considering it Rassenschande racial pollution The Nuremberg Laws stripped all Jews even quarter and half Jews second and first degree Mischlings of their German citizenship This meant that they had no basic citizens rights e g the right to vote In 1936 Jews were banned from all professional jobs effectively preventing them from having any influence in education politics higher education and industry On 15 November 1938 Jewish children were banned from going to normal schools By April 1939 nearly all Jewish companies had either collapsed under financial pressure and declining profits or had been persuaded to sell out to the Nazi government This further reduced their rights as human beings they were in many ways officially separated from the German populace Similar laws existed in Bulgaria The Law for protection of the nation Hungary Romania and Austria 19th century political cartoon Uncle Sam kicks out the Chinaman referring to the Chinese Exclusion Act Legislative state racism is known to have been enforced by the National Party of South Africa during its Apartheid regime between 1948 and 1994 Here a series of Apartheid legislation was passed through the legal systems to make it legal for white South Africans to have rights which were superior to those of non white South Africans Non white South Africans were not allowed involvement in any governing matters including voting access to quality healthcare the provision of basic services including clean water electricity as well as access to adequate schooling Non white South Africans were also prevented from accessing certain public areas from using certain public transportation and were required to live only in certain designated areas Non white South Africans were taxed differently than white South Africans and they were also required to carry on them at all times additional documentation which later became known as dom passes to certify their non white South African citizenship All of these legislative racial laws were abolished through a series of equal human rights laws which were passed at the end of the Apartheid era in the early 1990s Anti racismMain article Anti racism Anti racism includes beliefs actions movements and policies which are adopted or developed in order to oppose racism In general it promotes an egalitarian society in which people are not discriminated against on the basis of race Examples of anti racist movements include the civil rights movement the Anti Apartheid Movement and Black Lives Matter Nonviolent resistance is sometimes embraced as an element of anti racist movements although this was not always the case Hate crime laws affirmative action and bans on racist speech are also examples of government policy which is intended to suppress racism See alsoAfrophobia Allport s Scale Aporophobia Christian Identity Covert racism Creativity religion Curse and mark of Cain Discrimination based on skin color Environmental racism Environmental racism in Europe Ethnic hatred Hipster racism Identitarianism Index of racism related articles In group favoritism Labeling theory Minority stress Nigger Racial bias in criminal news Racial bias on Wikipedia Racial fetishism Racial literacy Racialization Raciolinguistics Racist pre Adamism Racism in horror films Racism in the LGBT community Reverse discrimination Romantic racism Social interpretations of race Spiritual racism Stereotype threat Tatarophobia Tragic mulatto Yellow PerilReferences and notes a b c Dennis R M 2004 Racism In Kuper A Kuper J eds The Social Science Encyclopedia Volume 2 3rd ed London New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 35969 1 Racism is the idea that there is a direct correspondence between a group s values behavior and attitudes and its physical features Racism is also a relatively new idea its birth can be traced to the European colonization of much of the world the rise and development of European capitalism and the development of the European and US slave trade a b c Ghani Navid 2008 Racism In Schaefer Richard T ed Encyclopedia of Race Ethnicity and Society Sage pp 1113 1115 ISBN 978 1 4129 2694 2 a b Newman David M 2012 Sociology Exploring the Architecture of Everyday Life 9th ed Thousand Oaks Calif SAGE Publications p 405 ISBN 978 1 4129 8729 5 Racism Belief that humans are subdivided into distinct groups that are different in their social behavior and innate capacities and that can be ranked as superior or inferior International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights December 21 1965 Retrieved December 23 2011 Lieberman Leonard 1997 Race 1997 and 2001 A Race Odyssey PDF American Anthropological Association p 2 In the period since 1492 European overseas empires and colonies were established The establishment of mines and plantations enriched Europe while impoverishing and decimating the conquered and enslaved peoples in Africa and the New World The race concept helped to give all this the appearance of scientific justification Fredrickson George M 1988 The arrogance of race historical perspectives on slavery racism and social inequality Middletown Conn Wesleyan University Press a b Reilly Kevin Kaufman Stephen Bodino Angela 2003 Racism a global reader Armonk NY M E Sharpe pp 45 52 ISBN 978 0 7656 1060 7 Martin Terry 1998 The Origins of Soviet Ethnic Cleansing PDF The Journal of Modern History 70 4 813 861 doi 10 1086 235168 JSTOR 10 1086 235168 Webster s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary Merriam Webster Inc 1983 p 969 ISBN 0 87779 508 8 race n2 Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 21 February 2016 a b c Garner Steve 2009 Racisms An Introduction Sage Archived from the original on 2019 04 01 Retrieved 2017 06 21 Racism The Canadian Encyclopedia 2013 Archived from the original on 8 June 2019 Retrieved 21 February 2016 Multiple sources Framework decision on combating racism and xenophobia Council Framework Decision 2008 913 JHA of 28 November 2008 European Union Retrieved 3 February 2011 International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination UN Treaty Series United Nations Archived from the original on 4 August 2011 Retrieved 3 February 2011 Bamshad Michael Steve E Olson December 2003 Does Race Exist Scientific American 289 6 78 85 Bibcode 2003SciAm 289f 78B doi 10 1038 scientificamerican1203 78 PMID 14631734 If races are defined as genetically discrete groups no Researchers can however use some genetic information to group individuals into clusters with medical relevance Patrinos Ari 2004 Race and the human genome Nature Genetics 36 S1 S2 S1 S2 doi 10 1038 ng2150 PMID 15510100 Keita Shomarka O Y amp Rick A Kittles 1997 The persistence of racial 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prohibition of discrimination based on ethnicity religion etc Regjeringen no Retrieved 10 December 2013 Gossett Thomas F Race The History of an Idea in America New York Oxford University Press 1997 ISBN 0 19 509778 5 Feagin Joe R 2000 Racist America Roots Current Realities and Future Reparations Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 92531 0 Du Bois W E B 1903 The Souls of Black Folk New York Bantam Classic Wellman David T 1993 Portraits of White Racism New York Cambridge University Press p x Massey D amp N Denton 1989 Hypersegregation in U S Metropolitan areas Black and Hispanic Segregation Along Five Dimensions Demography 26 3 378 379 doi 10 2307 2061599 JSTOR 2061599 PMID 2792476 S2CID 37301240 Cazenave Noel A amp Darlene Alvarez Maddern 1999 Defending the White Race White Male Faculty Opposition to a White Racism Course Race and Society 2 1 25 50 doi 10 1016 s1090 9524 00 00003 6 Sellers RM amp JN Shelton 2003 The role of racial identity in perceived racial discrimination Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 84 5 1079 1092 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 84 5 1079 PMID 12757150 a b Greenwald A G Banaji M R 1995 Implicit social cognition Attitudes self esteem and stereotypes Psychological Review 102 1 4 27 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 304 6161 doi 10 1037 0033 295x 102 1 4 PMID 7878162 Devos T 2008 Attitudes and attitude change Implicit attitudes 101 Theoretical and empirical Insights New York Psychology Press pp 61 84 Gawronski B Payne B K 2010 Handbook of Implicit Social Cognition Measurement Theory and Application ISBN 978 1 60623 674 1 Eberhardt Jennifer L et al 2004 Seeing Black Race Crime and Visual Processing Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 87 6 876 893 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 408 3542 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 87 6 876 PMID 15598112 Belenko Steven amp Cassia Spohn 2014 Drugs Crime and Justice Sage ISBN 978 1 4833 1295 8 Yeku James 3 May 2020 Anti Afropolitan ethics and the performative politics of online scambaiting Social Dynamics 46 2 240 258 doi 10 1080 02533952 2020 1813943 S2CID 222232833 Van Dijk Tuen 1992 Analyzing Racism Through Discourse Analysis Some Methodological Reflections in Race and Ethnicity in Research Methods Newbury Park CA Sage pp 92 134 ISBN 978 0 8039 5007 8 Watson Veronica T 2013 The Souls of White Folk African American Writers Theorize Whiteness Jackson The University Press of Mississippi p 137 ISBN 978 1 4968 0245 3 Definition of racism in English Oxford University Press Archived from the original on September 27 2016 Retrieved January 3 2018 Definition of racism Merriam Webster Retrieved January 3 2018 Blay Zeba 26 August 2015 Reverse Racism 4 Myths That Need To Stop Huffpost Black Voices Retrieved 28 February 2016 McWhorter Ladelle 2009 Racism and sexual oppression in Anglo America a genealogy Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 35296 5 OCLC 406565635 a b c Cashmore Ellis ed 2004 Reverse Racism Discrimination Encyclopedia of Race and Ethnic Studies Routledge p 373 ISBN 978 1 134 44706 0 a b Yee June Ying 2008 Racism Types of In Shaefer Richard T ed Encyclopedia of Race Ethnicity and Society Sage pp 1118 1119 ISBN 978 1 4129 2694 2 Ansell Amy Elizabeth 2013 Affirmative Action Color Consciousness Race and Ethnicity The Key Concepts Routledge pp 4 46 ISBN 978 0 415 33794 6 Wida Erica Chayes 26 June 2020 What does reverse racism mean and is it actually real Experts weigh in Today Newkirk II Vann R 5 August 2017 The Myth of Reverse Racism The Atlantic Massie Victoria M Americans are split on reverse racism That still doesn t mean it exists Vox p 29 June 2016 Emily Torbett August 21 2015 Reverse racism Can t exist by definition insulting to minority groups The Daily Athenaeum Retrieved February 3 2017 Ansell Amy Elizabeth 2013 Reverse Racism Race and Ethnicity The Key Concepts Routledge pp 135 138 ISBN 978 0 415 33794 6 a b Dovidio John F Gaertner Samuel L eds 1986 The aversive form of racism Prejudice Discrimination and Racism Academic Press pp 61 89 ISBN 978 0 12 221425 7 Dovidio John F Gaertner Samuel L 2004 Aversive Racism In Olson James M Zanna Mark P eds Advances in Experimental Social Psychology Vol 36 pp 1 52 doi 10 1016 S0065 2601 04 36001 6 ISBN 978 0 12 015236 0 Saucier Donald A Miller Carol T Doucet Nicole 2005 Differences in Helping Whites and Blacks A Meta Analysis Personality and Social Psychology Review 9 1 2 16 doi 10 1207 s15327957pspr0901 1 PMID 15745861 S2CID 14542705 Ansell Amy E 2008 Color Blindness In Schaefer Richard T ed Encyclopedia of Race Ethnicity and Society Sage pp 320 322 ISBN 978 1 4522 6586 5 Bonilla Silva Eduardo 2001 White Supremacy and Racism in the Post Civil Rights Era Lynne Rienner Publishers Inc pp 137 166 ISBN 978 1 58826 032 1 Bonilla Silva Eduardo 2003 Racism without Racists Color blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield pp 2 29 ISBN 978 0 7425 1633 5 Parker Laurence 1999 Race Is Race Isn t Critical Race Theory and Qualitative Studies in Education Westview Press p 184 ISBN 978 0 8133 9069 7 a b Ballantine Jeanne H Roberts Keith A 2015 Our Social World Introduction to Sociology Condensed Version 3rd ed Los Angeles Sage ISBN 978 1 4522 7575 8 Kundnani Arun 2002 10 01 An Unholy Alliance Racism Religion and Communalism Race amp Class 44 2 71 80 doi 10 1177 0306396802044002976 ISSN 0306 3968 S2CID 145013667 Wren Karen 2001 Cultural racism Something rotten in the state of Denmark Social amp Cultural Geography 2 2 141 162 doi 10 1080 14649360120047788 S2CID 33883381 Blaut James M 1992 The Theory of Cultural Racism Antipode A Radical Journal of Geography 24 4 289 299 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8330 1992 tb00448 x Lewis Sarah 15 September 2019 The Racial Bias Built Into Photography The New York Times Retrieved 4 December 2020 Fussell Sidney 17 August 2017 Why Can t This Soap Dispenser Identify Dark Skin Gizmodo Retrieved 4 December 2020 Lohr Steve 9 February 2018 Facial Recognition Is Accurate if You re a White Guy The New York Times Retrieved 4 December 2020 Savage Charlie December 21 2011 Countrywide Will Settle a Bias Suit The New York Times Retrieved December 24 2011 Richard W Race Analysing ethnic education policy making in England and Wales Sheffield Online Papers in Social Research University of Sheffield p 12 Retrieved 20 June 2006 Archived September 23 2006 at the Wayback Machine Karenga Maulana 22 23 June 2001 The Ethics of Reparations Engaging the Holocaust of Enslavement PDF The National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America N COBRA Retrieved 31 January 2017 Mountz Alison 2009 Key Concepts in Political Geography Sage p 328 a b Said Edward 1978 Orientalism New York Pantheon Books p 357 Gregory Derek 2004 The Colonial Present Blackwell publishers p 4 Said Edward 1978 Orientalism New York Pantheon Books p 360 Principles to Guide Housing Policy at the Beginning of the Millennium Michael Schill amp Susan Wachter Cityscape Takashi Fujitani Geoffrey Miles White Lisa Yoneyama 2001 Perilous memories the Asia Pacific War s Duke University Press p 303 ISBN 978 0 8223 2564 2 Miller Stuart Creighton 1984 Benevolent Assimilation The American Conquest of the Philippines 1899 1903 Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 03081 5 p 5 imperialist editors came out in favor of retaining the entire archipelago using higher sounding justifications related to the white man s burden Opinion archive International Herald Tribune February 4 1999 In Our Pages 100 75 and 50 Years Ago 1899 Kipling s Plea International Herald Tribune 6 Notes that Rudyard Kipling s new poem The White Man s Burden is regarded as the strongest argument yet published in favor of expansion Out West University of Nebraska Press 2000 p 96 Facebook labels declaration of independence as hate speech The Guardian Retrieved August 7 2019 L Frank Baum s Editorials on the Sioux Nation Archived from the original on December 9 2007 Retrieved 2007 12 09 Full text of both with commentary by professor A Waller Hastings Fact check Quotes from prominent American statesmen on race are accurate Reuters Retrieved December 8 2022 Aronson E Wilson T D amp Akert R M 2010 Social Psychology 7th edition New York Pearson McConahay J B 1983 Modern Racism and Modern Discrimination The Effects of Race Racial Attitudes and Context on Simulated Hiring Decisions Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 9 4 551 558 doi 10 1177 0146167283094004 S2CID 144674550 Brief A P Dietz J Cohen R R Pugh S D Vaslow J B 2000 Just doing business Modern racism and obedience to authority as explanations for employment discrimination Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 81 1 72 97 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 201 4044 doi 10 1006 obhd 1999 2867 PMID 10631069 McConahay J B 1986 Modern racism ambivalence and the modern racism scale Pettigrew T F 1989 The nature of modern racism in the United States Revue Internationale de Psychologie Sociale Chicago Staff March 30 2015 How the biases in the back of your mind affect how you feel about race PBS Newshour Accessed October 9 2017 C Peter Chen 1945 02 23 Joint Declaration of the Greater East Asia Conference below Ww2db com Retrieved 2011 01 26 Toward a World without Evil Alfred Metraux as UNESCO Anthropologist 1946 1962 by Harald E L Prins UNESCO European Court of Human Rights case law factsheet on racial discrimination PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 06 14 Retrieved 2011 01 26 Text of the Convention Archived July 26 2011 at the Wayback Machine International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination 1966 1 Archived January 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine Pierre Andre Taguieff La force du prejuge 1987 in French Race Studies in Denmark PDF Geografisk Tidsskrift in Danish 19 1907 Retrieved 2013 11 14 Du Bois W E B 1897 The Conservation of Races p 21 Archived from the original on 2013 03 29 Retrieved 2007 07 16 Marius Turda 2004 The idea of national superiority in Central Europe 1880 1918 Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 978 0 7734 6180 2 National Analytical Study on Racist Violence and Crime RAXEN Focal Point for Italy Annamaria Rivera FRA Helping to make fundamental rights a reality for everyone in the European Union PDF European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights Archived from the original PDF on December 16 2008 Retrieved 22 August 2010 Joseph L Graves 2001 The Emperor s new clothes biological theories of race at the millennium Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 2847 2 Inter American Convention against Racism and all forms of Discrimination and Intolerance Study prepared by the Inter American Juridical Committee 2002 Richter Facing East from Indian Country p 208 Fredrickson George M 1988 The Arrogance of Race Historical Perspectives on Slavery Racism and Social Inequality Middletown Conn Wesleyan University Press UN General Assembly Universal Declaration of Human Rights 10 December 1948 217 A III available at 2 accessed 18 July 2012 On this nationalities question and the problem of nationalism see the relevant articles for a non exhaustive account of the state of contemporary historical researches famous works include Ernest Gellner Nations and Nationalism 1983 Eric Hobsbawm The Age of Revolution Europe 1789 1848 1962 Nations and Nationalism since 1780 programme myth reality 1990 Benedict Anderson Imagined Communities 1991 Charles Tilly Coercion Capital and European States AD 990 1992 1990 Anthony D Smith Theories of Nationalism 1971 etc John Stuart Mill Considerations on Representative Government 1861 a b Hannah Arendt The Origins of Totalitarianism 1951 Maurice Barres Le Roman de l energie nationale The Novel of National Energy a trilogy started in 1897 Hess Richard S 2016 The Old Testament A Historical Theological and Critical Introduction Baker Academic p 59 ISBN 978 1 4934 0573 2 Retrieved 4 October 2017 a b Kevin Reilly Stephen Kaufman Angela Bodino 2002 Racism A Global Reader M E Sharpe pp 52 58 ISBN 978 0 7656 1060 7 Bernard Lewis 1992 Race and slavery in the Middle East an historical enquiry Oxford University Press pp 54 55 ISBN 978 0 19 505326 5 Aristotle on Slavery Oregonstate edu Archived from the original on September 6 2013 Retrieved 2013 11 14 Isaac Benjamin H 2006 The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity Princeton University Press p 175 ISBN 978 0 691 12598 5 Retrieved 2013 11 14 Puzzo Dante A 1964 Racism and the Western Tradition Journal of the History of Ideas 25 4 579 586 doi 10 2307 2708188 JSTOR 2708188 a b c d Bernard Lewis 1992 Race and slavery in the Middle East an historical enquiry Oxford University Press p 53 ISBN 978 0 19 505326 5 Khalid Abdallah 1977 The Liberation of Swahili from European Appropriation East African Literature Bureau p 38 Retrieved 10 June 2014 El Hamel Chouki 2002 Race slavery and Islam in Maghribi Mediterranean thought the question of the Haratin in Morocco The Journal of North African Studies 7 3 29 52 39 40 doi 10 1080 13629380208718472 S2CID 219625829 Neither in the Qur an nor in the Hadith is there any indication of racial difference among humankind But as a consequence of the Arab conquests a mutual assimilation between Islam and the cultural and the scriptural traditions of Christian and Jewish populations occurred Racial distinctions between humankind with reference to the sons of Noah is found in the Babylonian Talmud a collection of rabbinic writings which dates back to the sixth century Bernard Lewis 1992 Race and slavery in the Middle East an historical enquiry Oxford University Press pp 28 34 ISBN 978 0 19 505326 5 Lewis Bernard 2002 Race and Slavery in the Middle East Oxford University Press p 93 ISBN 978 0 19 505326 5 West Asian views on black Africans during the medieval era Colorq org Retrieved 2010 05 23 Hannoum Abdelmajid 1 January 2003 Translation and the Colonial Imaginary Ibn Khaldun Orientalist History and Theory 42 1 61 81 doi 10 1111 1468 2303 00230 JSTOR 3590803 Lindsay James E 2005 Daily Life in the Medieval Islamic World Greenwood Publishing Group pp 12 15 ISBN 978 0 313 32270 9 Hoyland Robert G 2002 Arabia and 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07463 9 On A Neglected Aspect Of Western Racism Kurt Jonassohn December 2000 Pascal Blanchard Sandrine Lemaire amp Nicolas Bancel August 2000 Human zoos Racist theme parks for Europe s colonialists Le Monde diplomatique Ces zoos humains de la Republique coloniale Le Monde diplomatique in French August 2000 Human Zoos by Nicolas Bancel Pascal Blanchard and Sandrine Lemaire in Le Monde diplomatique August 2000 French free Savages and Beasts The Birth of the Modern Zoo Nigel Rothfels Johns Hopkins University Press The Colonial Exhibition of May 1931 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2018 12 15 Retrieved 2006 08 01 96 6 KB by Michael G Vann History Dept Santa Clara University Robert Kurzban John Tooby amp Leda Cosmides December 18 2001 Can race be erased Coalitional computation and social categorization Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98 26 15387 15392 Bibcode 2001PNAS 9815387K doi 10 1073 pnas 251541498 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 65039 PMID 11742078 The authors provide a summary and other comments at untitled Archived from the original on 2008 06 27 New Scientist Issue 2595 17 March 2007 Richard Dawkins 2006 The selfish gene Oxford University Press p 99 ISBN 978 0 19 929115 1 Hammond R A Axelrod R 2006 The Evolution of Ethnocentrism Journal of Conflict Resolution 50 6 926 936 doi 10 1177 0022002706293470 S2CID 9613947 Telzer Eva Humphreys Kathryn Mor Shapiro Tottenham Nim 2013 Amygdala Sensitivity to Race Is Not Present in Childhood but Emerges over Adolescence Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 25 2 234 244 doi 10 1162 jocn a 00311 PMC 3628780 PMID 23066731 Chekroud Adam M Everett Jim A C Bridge Holly Hewstone Miles 27 March 2014 A review of neuroimaging studies of race related prejudice does amygdala response reflect threat Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8 179 doi 10 3389 fnhum 2014 00179 ISSN 1662 5161 PMC 3973920 PMID 24734016 Hodson G Busseri M A 5 January 2012 Bright Minds and Dark Attitudes Lower Cognitive Ability Predicts Greater Prejudice Through Right Wing Ideology and Low Intergroup Contact Psychological Science 23 2 187 195 doi 10 1177 0956797611421206 PMID 22222219 S2CID 206585907 Edward Russel of Liverpool The Knights of Bushido 2002 p 238 Herbert Bix Hirohito and the making of modern Japan 2001 pp 313 314 326 359 360 Karel van Wolferen The Enigma of Japanese Power 1989 pp 263 272 Paulino Edward December 2006 Anti Haitianism Historical Memory and the Potential for Genocidal Violence in the Dominican Republic Genocide Studies International 1 3 265 288 doi 10 3138 7864 3362 3R24 6231 eISSN 2291 1855 ISSN 2291 1847 Further readingAllen Theodore 1994 The Invention of the White Race Volume 1 London Verso Allen Theodore 1997 The Invention of the White Race Volume 2 London Verso Barkan Elazar 1992 The Retreat of Scientific Racism Changing Concepts of Race in Britain and the United States between the World Wars Cambridge University Press New York Barth Boris nbn de 0159 2010092173 Racism European History Online Mainz Institute of European History 2011 retrieved November 16 2011 Bolick Clint 2008 Racism In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA Sage Cato Institute pp 411 412 ISBN 978 1412965804 OCLC 750831024 Bonilla Silva Eduardo 2018 Racism without Racists Color Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc Curta Florin 2001 The Making of the Slavs History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region c 500 700 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 42888 0 Dain Bruce 2002 A Hideous Monster of the Mind American Race Theory in the Early Republic Harvard University Press Cambridge 18th century US racial theory Daniels Jessie 1997 White Lies Race Class Gender and Sexuality in White Supremacist Discourse Routledge New York Daniels Jessie 2009 Cyber Racism White Supremacy Online and the New Attack on Civil Rights Rowman amp Littlefield Lanham MD Ehrenreich Eric 2007 The Nazi Ancestral Proof Genealogy Racial Science and the Final Solution Indiana University Press Bloomington Ewen amp Ewen 2006 Typecasting On the Arts and Sciences of Human Inequality Seven Stories Press New York Feagin Joe R 2006 Systemic Racism A Theory of Oppression Routledge New York Feagin Joe R 2009 Racist America Roots Current Realities and Future Reparations 2nd Edition Routledge New York Eliav Feldon Miriam Isaac Benjamin amp Ziegler Joseph 2009 The Origins of Racism in the West Cambridge University Press Cambridge Gibson Rich 2005 Against Racism and Irrationalism Graves Joseph 2004 The Race Myth NY Dutton Ignatiev Noel 1995 How the Irish Became White NY Routledge Isaac Benjamin 1995 The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity Princeton Princeton University Press Lentin Alana 2008 Racism A Beginner s Guide Oxford One World Levi Strauss Claude 1952 Race and History UNESCO Memmi Albert 2000 Racism University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 3165 0 Moody Adams Michele 2005 Racism in Frey R G Heath Wellman Christopher eds A companion to applied ethics Blackwell Companions to Philosophy Oxford Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 89 101 doi 10 1002 9780470996621 ch7 ISBN 978 1 4051 3345 6 Rocchio Vincent F 2000 Reel Racism Confronting Hollywood s Construction of Afro American Culture Westview Press Smedley Audrey Smedley Brian D 2005 Race as Biology if Fiction Racism as a Social Problem is Real American Psychologist 60 1 16 26 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 694 7956 doi 10 1037 0003 066x 60 1 16 PMID 15641918 Smedley Audrey 2007 Race in North America Origins and Evolution of a World View Boulder CO Westview Stoler Ann Laura 1997 Racial Histories and Their Regimes of Truth Political Power and Social Theory 11 183 206 historiography of race and racism Taguieff Pierre Andre 1987 La Force du prejuge Essai sur le racisme et ses doubles Tel Gallimard La Decouverte Poliakov Leon The Aryan Myth A History of Racist and Nationalistic Ideas In Europe Barnes amp Noble Books 1996 ISBN 0 7607 0034 6 Trepagnier Barbara 2006 Silent Racism How Well Meaning White People Perpetuate the Racial Divide Paradigm Publishers Twine France Winddance 1997 Racism in a Racial Democracy The Maintenance of White Supremacy in Brazil Rutgers University Press UNESCO The Race Question 1950 Tali Farkash Racists among us in Y Net Yediot Aharonot Jewish Scene section April 20 2007 Winant Howard The New Politics of Race 2004 Winant Howard and Omi Michael Racial Formation in the United States Routeledge 1986 Second Edition 1994 Bettina Wohlgemuth 2007 Racism in the 21st century how everybody can make a difference ISBN 978 3 8364 1033 5 Wright W D 1998 Racism Matters Westport CT Praeger External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Racism Wikiquote has quotations related to Racism Look up racism in Wiktionary the free dictionary Being a Black Male in Cuba By Lucia Lopez Havana Times May 5 2009 Race history and culture Ethics March 1996 Extract of two articles by Claude Levi Strauss Race Racism and the Law Information about race racism and racial distinctions in the law RacismReview Created and maintained by American sociologists Joe Feagin PhD and Jessie Daniels PhD provides a research based analysis of racism The Impact of Racism on Child and Adolescent Health Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Racism amp oldid 1135549697, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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