|
||||
|
||||
Seeing Through Colorblindness: Implicit Bias and the LawJerry KangUniversity of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) - School of Law Kristin LaneBard College Program in Psychology June 30, 2010 UCLA Law Review, Vol. 58, p. 465, 2010 UCLA School of Law Research Paper No. 10-22 Abstract: Once upon a time, the central civil rights questions were indisputably normative. What did “equal justice under law” require? Did it, for example, permit segregation, or was separate never equal? This is no longer the case. Today, the central civil rights questions of our time turn also on the underlying empirics. In a post-civil rights era, in what some people exuberantly embrace as post-racial, many assume that we already live in a colorblind society. Is this in fact the case? Recent findings about implicit bias from mind scientists sharply suggest other-wise. This Article summarizes the empirical evidence that rejects facile claims of perceptual, cognitive, and behavioral colorblindness. It then calls on the law to take a “behaviorally realist” account of these findings, and maps systematically how it might do so in sensible, non-hysterical, and evidence-based ways. Recognizing that this call may be politically naive, the Article examines and answers three objections, sounding in “junk science” backlash, “hard-wired” resignation, and “rational” justification.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 56 Keywords: implicit bias, behavioral realism, implicit association test, IAT, backlash, colorblindness, social cognition, discrimination, affirmative action, profiling, determinism Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: July 1, 2010 ; Last revised: January 5, 2011Suggested CitationContact Information
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
© 2013 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
FAQ
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Copyright
This page was processed by apollo3 in 0.704 seconds