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Chapter 5: How Do Institutions Contribute to Racism in the United States?

Chapter 5: How Do Institutions Contribute to Racism in the United States?

pp. 130-168

Authors

, University of California, San Diego, , University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, , Harvard University, Massachusetts
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How can institutions be “racist?” What additional challenges are posed when bias is produced and reproduced by everyday institutional practices? This chapter traces the historical evolution of institutional discrimination from Reconstruction to the present, highlighting explicit legal and implicit policy-level discrimination in the Jim Crow era, the New Deal, and historical immigration policy. It also provides more in-depth analysis of the role of race in the present-day housing market, in the criminal justice system, and in election administration.

Keywords

  • 1924 Indian Citizenship Act
  • 1935 Social Security Act
  • 1953 Termination Act
  • 1956 Indian Relocation Act
  • Border Patrol
  • Cartel
  • Chinese Exclusion Act
  • Civil Liberties Act
  • Compromise of 1877
  • Immigration Act of 1917
  • Index of dissimilarity
  • Indian Removal Act
  • Manifest Destiny
  • Naturalization Act of 1790
  • Restrictive covenants
  • Subprime mortgages
  • Trail of Tears
  • Wounded Knee Massacre

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