TY - BOOK AU - Flagg,Barbara J. TI - Was blind, but now I see: white race consciousness & the law T2 - Critical America PY - 1998///] CY - New York PB - New York University Press KW - Legal status, laws, etc KW - Law and legislation KW - United States KW - Race relations KW - African Americans KW - Race discrimination KW - Electronic books N1 - E-Book-ACLS / Zugriff nur im DHI-Lesesaal; American Council of Learned Societies/ https://www.humanitiesebook.org/about; Includes bibliographical references (pages 149-182) and index; Introduction -- An overview of race and racism -- The constitutional requirement of discriminatory intent -- Constitutional qualms -- Disparate impact under title vii -- Statutory interpretation -- Notes on doctrinal reform N2 - ""Race" does not speak to most white people. Rather, whites tend to associate race with people of color and to equate whiteness with racelessness. As Barbara J. Flagg demonstrates in this important book, this "transparency" phenomenon - the invisibility of whiteness to white people - profoundly affects the ways in which whites make decisions: they rely on criteria perceived by the decisionmaker as race-neutral but which in fact reflect white, race-specific norms. Flagg here identifies this transparently white decisionmaking as a form of institutional racism that contributes significantly, though unobtrusively, to the maintenance of white supremacy. Bringing the discussion to bear on the arena of law, Flagg analyzes key areas of race discrimination law and makes the case for reforms that would bring legal doctrine into greater harmony with the recognition of institutional racism in general and the transparency phenomenon in particular; She concludes with an exploration of the meaning of whiteness in a pluralist culture, paving the way for a positive, nonracist conception of whiteness as a distinct racial identity. An informed and substantive call for doctrinal reform, Was Blind, But Now I See is the most expansive treatment yet of the relationship between whiteness and law."--Jacket UR - https://hdl.handle.net/2027/heb34676 ER -