Social interpretations of race regard the common categorizations of people into different races, often with biologist
tagging of particular "racial" attributes beyond mere anatomy, as more
socially and culturally determined than based upon biology. Some
interpretations are often deconstructionist and poststructuralist in that they critically analyze the historical construction and development of racial categories.
Social interpretation of physical variation
Incongruities of racial classifications
The biological anthropologist Jonathan Marks
(1995) argued that even as the idea of "race" was becoming a powerful
organizing principle in many societies, the shortcomings of the concept
were apparent. In the Old World, the gradual transition in appearances
from one racial group to adjacent racial groups emphasized that "one
variety of mankind does so sensibly pass into the other, that you cannot
mark out the limits between them," as Blumenbach observed in his
writings on human variation.
In parts of the Americas, the situation was somewhat different. The
immigrants to the New World came largely from widely separated regions
of the Old World—western and northern Europe, western Africa, and,
later, eastern Asia and southern and eastern Europe. In the Americas,
the immigrant populations began to mix among themselves and with the indigenous
inhabitants of the continent. In the United States, for example, most
people who self-identify as African American have some European
ancestors—in one analysis of genetic markers that have differing
frequencies between continents, European ancestry ranged from an
estimated 7% for a sample of Jamaicans to ∼23% for a sample of African
Americans from New Orleans. In a survey of college students who self-identified as white in a northeastern U.S. university, the west African and Native American genetic contribution were 0.7% and 3.2%.
In the United States, social and legal conventions developed over
time that forced individuals of mixed ancestry into simplified racial
categories. An example is the "one-drop rule" implemented in some state laws that treated anyone with a single known African American ancestor as black.
The decennial censuses conducted since 1790 in the United States also
created an incentive to establish racial categories and fit people into
those categories.
In other countries in the Americas, where mixing among groups was more
extensive, social non racial categories have tended to be more numerous
and fluid, with people moving into or out of categories on the basis of a
combination of socioeconomic status, social class, ancestry.
Efforts to sort the increasingly mixed population of the United
States into discrete racial categories generated many difficulties. Additionally, efforts to track mixing between census racial groups led to a proliferation of categories (such as mulatto and octoroon) and "blood quantum" distinctions that became increasingly untethered from self-reported ancestry. A person's racial identity can change over time. One study found differences between self-ascribed race and Veterans Affairs administrative data.
Race as a social construct and populationism
The notion of a biological basis for race originally emerged through
speculations surrounding the "blood purity" of Jews during the Spanish
Inquisition, eventually translating to a general association of one's
biology with their social and personal characteristics. In the 19th
century, this recurring ideology was intensified in the development of
the racial sciences, eugenics and ethnology, which meant to further
categorize groups of humans in terms of biological superiority or
inferiority. While the field of racial sciences, also known as scientific racism, has expired in history, these antiquated conceptions of race have persisted throughout the 21st century. (See also: Historical origins of racial classification)
Contrary to popular belief that the division of the human species
based on physical variations is natural, there exists no clear,
reliable distinctions that bind people to such groupings. According to the American Anthropological Association,
"Evidence from the analysis of genetics (e.g., DNA) indicates that most
physical variation, about 94%, lies within so-called racial groups.
Conventional geographic "racial" groupings differ from one another only
in about 6% of their genes." While there is a biological basis for differences in human phenotypes, most notably in skin color,
the genetic variability of humans is found not amongst, but rather
within racial groups – meaning the perceived level of dissimilarity
amongst the species has virtually no biological basis. Genetic diversity
has characterized human survival, rendering the idea of a "pure"
ancestry as obsolete.
Under this interpretation, race is conceptualized through a lens of
artificiality, rather than through the skeleton of a scientific
discovery. As a result, scholars have begun to broaden discourses of
race by defining it as a social construct and exploring the historical
contexts that led to its inception and persistence in contemporary
society.
Most historians, anthropologists, and sociologists describe human races as a social construct, preferring instead the term population or ancestry, which can be given a clear operational definition. Even those who reject the formal concept of race, however, still use the word race in day-to-day speech. This may either be a matter of semantics,
or an effect of an underlying cultural significance of race in racist
societies. Regardless of the name, a working concept of sub-species
grouping can be useful, because in the absence of cheap and widespread
genetic tests, various race-linked gene mutations (see Cystic fibrosis, Lactose intolerance, Tay–Sachs disease and Sickle cell anemia)
are difficult to address without recourse to a category between
"individual" and "species". As genetic tests for such conditions become
cheaper, and as detailed haplotype maps and SNP
databases become available, identifiers of race should diminish. Also,
increasing interracial marriage is reducing the predictive power of
race. For example, babies born with Tay–Sachs disease
in North America are not only or primarily Ashkenazi Jews, despite
stereotypes to contrary; French Canadians, Louisiana Cajuns, and
Irish-Americans also see high rates of the disease.
Experts in the fields of genetics, law, and sociology have offered their opinions on the subject. Audrey Smedley and Brian D. Smedley of Virginia Commonwealth University Institute of Medicine
discuss the anthropological and historical perspectives on ethnicity,
culture, and race. They define culture as the habits acquired by a
society. Smedley states "Ethnicity and culture are related phenomena and
bear no intrinsic connection to human biological variations or race"
(Smedley 17). The authors state using physical characteristics to define
an ethnic identity is inaccurate. The variation of humans has actually
decreased over time since, as the author states, "Immigration,
intermating, intermarriage, and reproduction have led to increasing
physical heterogeneity of peoples in many areas of the world" (Smedley
18). They referred to other experts and their research, pointing out
that humans are 99% alike. That one percent is caused by natural genetic
variation, and has nothing to do with the ethnic group of the subject.
Racial classification in the United States started in the 1700s with
three ethnically distinct groups. These groups were the white Europeans,
Native Americans, and Africans. The concept of race was skewed around
these times because of the social implications of belonging to one group
or another. The view that one race is biologically different from
another rose out of society's grasp for power and authority over other
ethnic groups. This did not only happen in the United States but around
the world as well. Society created race to create hierarchies in which
the majority would prosper most.
Another group of experts in sociology has written on this topic. Guang Guo, Yilan Fu, Yi Li, Kathleen Mullan Harris of the University of North Carolina
department of sociology as well as Hedwig Lee (University of Washington
Seattle), Tianji Cai (University of Macau) comment on remarks made by
one expert. The debate is over DNA differences, or lack thereof, between
different races. The research in the original article they are
referring to uses different methods of DNA testing between distinct
ethnic groups and compares them to other groups. Small differences were
found, but those were not based on race. They were from biological
differences caused from the region in which the people live. They
describe that the small differences cannot be fully explained because
the understanding of migration, intermarriage, and ancestry is
unreliable at the individual level. Race cannot be related to ancestry
based on the research on which they are commenting. They conclude that
the idea of "races as biologically distinct peoples with differential
abilities and behaviors has long been discredited by the scientific
community" (2338).
One more expert in the field has given her opinion. Ann Morning of the New York University Department of Sociology, and member of the American Sociological Association,
discusses the role of biology in the social construction of race. She
examines the relationship between genes and race and the social
construction of social race clusters. Morning states that everyone is
assigned to a racial group because of their physical characteristics.
She identifies through her research the existence of DNA population
clusters. She states that society would want to characterize these
clusters as races. Society characterizes race as a set of physical
characteristics. The clusters though have an overlap in physical
characteristics and thus cannot be counted as a race by society or by
science. Morning concludes that "Not only can constructivist theory
accommodate or explain the occasional alignment of social
classifications and genetic estimates that Shiao et al.'s model
hypothesizes, but empirical research on human genetics is far from
claiming—let alone demonstrating—that statistically inferred clusters
are the equivalent of races" (Morning 203). Only using ethnic groups to
map a genome is entirely inaccurate, instead every individual must be
viewed as having their own wholly unique genome (unique in the 1%, not
the 99% all humans share).
Ian Haney López, the John H. Boalt Professor of Law at the University of California, Berkeley
explains ways race is a social construct. He uses examples from history
of how race was socially constructed and interpreted. One such example
was of the Hudgins v. Wright
case. A slave woman sued for her freedom and the freedom of her two
children on the basis that her grandmother was Native American. The race
of the Wright had to be socially proven, and neither side could present
enough evidence. Since the slave owner Hudgins bore the burden of
proof, Wright and her children gained their freedom. López uses this
example to show the power of race in society. Human fate, he argues,
still depends upon ancestry and appearance. Race is a powerful force in
everyday life. These races are not determined by biology though, they
are created by society to keep power with the majority. He describes
that there are not any genetic characteristics that all blacks have that
non-whites do not possess and vice versa. He uses the example of
Mexican. It truly is a nationality, yet it has become a catch-all for
all Hispanic nationalities. This simplification is wrong, López argues,
for it is not only inaccurate but it tends to treat all "Mexicans" as
below fervent Americans. He describes that "More recently, genetic
testing has made it clear the close connections all humans share, as
well as the futility of explaining those differences that do exist in
terms of racially relevant gene codes" (Lopez 199–200). Those
differences clearly have no basis in ethnicity, so race is completely
socially constructed.
Some
argue it is preferable when considering biological relations to think
in terms of populations, and when considering cultural relations to
think in terms of ethnicity, rather than of race.
These developments had important consequences. For example, some scientists
developed the notion of "population" to take the place of race. It is
argued that this substitution is not simply a matter of exchanging one
word for another.
This view does not deny that there are physical differences among
peoples; it simply claims that the historical conceptions of "race" are
not particularly useful in accounting for these differences
scientifically. In particular, it is claimed that:
- knowing someone's "race" does not provide comprehensive predictive information about biological characteristics, and only absolutely predicts those traits that have been selected to define the racial categories, e.g. knowing a person's skin color, which is generally acknowledged to be one of the markers of race (or taken as a defining characteristic of race), does not allow good predictions of a person's blood type to be made.
- in general, the worldwide distribution of human phenotypes exhibits gradual trends of difference across geographic zones, not the categorical differences of race; in particular, there are many peoples (like the San of S. W. Africa, or the people of northern India) who have phenotypes that do not neatly fit into the standard race categories.
- focusing on race has historically led not only to seemingly insoluble disputes about classification (e.g. are the Japanese a distinct race, a mixture of races, or part of the East Asian race? and what about the Ainu?) but has also exposed disagreement about the criteria for making decisions—the selection of phenotypic traits seemed arbitrary.
Neven Sesardic
has argued that such arguments are unsupported by empirical evidence
and politically motivated. Arguing that races are not completely
discrete biologically is a straw man
argument. He argues "racial recognition is not actually based on a
single trait (like skin color) but rather on a number of characteristics
that are to a certain extent concordant and that jointly make the
classification not only possible but fairly reliable as well". Forensic
anthropologists can classify a person's race with an accuracy close to
100% using only skeletal remains if they take into consideration several
characteristics at the same time. A.W.F. Edwards has argued similarly regarding genetic differences in "Human genetic diversity: Lewontin's fallacy".
Race in biomedicine
There is an active debate among biomedical researchers about the
meaning and importance of race in their research. The primary impetus
for considering race in biomedical research is the possibility of
improving the prevention and treatment of diseases
by predicting hard-to-ascertain factors on the basis of more easily
ascertained characteristics. The most well-known examples of genetically
determined disorders that vary in incidence between ethnic groups would
be sickle cell disease and thalassemia among black and Mediterranean populations respectively and Tay–Sachs disease among people of Ashkenazi Jewish
descent. Some fear that the use of racial labels in biomedical research
runs the risk of unintentionally exacerbating health disparities, so
they suggest alternatives to the use of racial taxonomies.
Case studies in the social construction of race
Race in the United States
In the United States since its early history, Native Americans,
African-Americans and European-Americans were classified as belonging to
different races. For nearly three centuries, the criteria for
membership in these groups were similar, comprising a person's
appearance, his fraction of known non-White ancestry, and his social
circle.
But the criteria for membership in these races diverged in the late
19th century. During Reconstruction, increasing numbers of Americans
began to consider anyone with "one drop" of "Black blood" to be Black. By the early 20th century, this notion of invisible blackness was made statutory in many states and widely adopted nationwide. In contrast, Amerindians continue to be defined by a certain percentage of "Indian blood" (called blood quantum) due in large part to American slavery ethics.
Race definitions in the United States
The concept of race as used by the Census Bureau reflects
self-identification by people according to the race or races with which
they most closely identify. These categories are sociopolitical
constructs and should not be interpreted as being scientific or
anthropological in nature. They change from one census to another, and
the racial categories include both racial and national-origin groups.
Race in Brazil
Compared to 19th-century United States, 20th-century Brazil
was characterized by a relative absence of sharply defined racial
groups. This pattern reflects a different history and different social relations. Basically, race in Brazil
was recognized as the difference between ancestry (which determines
genotype) and phenotypic differences. Racial identity was not governed
by a rigid descent rule. A Brazilian child was never automatically
identified with the racial type of one or both parents, nor were there
only two categories to choose from. Over a dozen racial categories are
recognized in conformity with the combinations of hair color, hair
texture, eye color, and skin color. These types grade into each other
like the colors of the spectrum, and no one category stands
significantly isolated from the rest. That is, race referred to
appearance, not heredity.
Through this system of racial identification, parents and
children and even brothers and sisters were frequently accepted as
representatives of opposite racial types. In a fishing village in the
state of Bahia,
an investigator showed 100 people pictures of three sisters and they
were asked to identify the races of each. In only six responses were the
sisters identified by the same racial term. Fourteen responses used a
different term for each sister. In another experiment nine portraits
were shown to a hundred people. Forty different racial types were
elicited. It was found, in addition, that a given Brazilian might be
called by as many as thirteen different terms by other members of the
community. These terms are spread out across practically the entire
spectrum of theoretical racial types. A further consequence of the
absence of a descent rule was that Brazilians apparently not only
disagreed about the racial identity of specific individuals, but they
also seemed to be in disagreement about the abstract meaning of the
racial terms as defined by words and phrases. For example, 40% of a
sample ranked moreno claro as a lighter type than mulato claro, while
60% reversed this order. A further note of confusion is that one person
might employ different racial terms to describe the same person over a
short time span. The choice of which racial description to use may vary
according to both the personal relationships and moods of the
individuals involved. The Brazilian census
lists one's race according to the preference of the person being
interviewed. As a consequence, hundreds of races appeared in the census
results, ranging from blue (which is blacker than the usual black) to
pink (which is whiter than the usual white).
However, Brazilians are not so naïve to ignore one's racial
origins just because of his (or her) better social status. An
interesting example of this phenomenon has occurred recently, when the
famous football (soccer) player Ronaldo declared publicly that he considered himself as White, thus linking racism to a form or another of class conflict.
This caused a series of ironic notes on newspapers, which pointed out
that he should have been proud of his African origin (which is obviously
noticeable), a fact that must have made life for him (and for his
ancestors) more difficult, so, being a successful personality was, in
spite of that, a victory for him. What occurs in Brazil that
differentiates it largely from the US or South Africa, for example, is
that black or mixed-race people are, in fact, more accepted in social
circles if they have more education, or have a successful life (a
euphemism for "having a better salary"). As a consequence, inter-racial
marriages are more common, and more accepted, among highly educated Afro-Brazilians than lower-educated ones.
So, although the identification of a person by race is far more
fluid and flexible in Brazil than in the U.S., there still are racial
stereotypes and prejudices. African features have been considered less
desirable; Blacks have been considered socially inferior, and Whites
superior. These white supremacist values were a legacy of European colonization and the slave-based plantation system. The complexity of racial classifications in Brazil is reflective of the extent of miscegenation in Brazilian society, which remains highly, but not strictly, stratified
along color lines. Henceforth, Brazil's desired image as a perfect
"post-racist" country, composed of the "cosmic race" celebrated in 1925
by José Vasconcelos, must be met with caution, as sociologist Gilberto Freyre demonstrated in 1933 in Casa Grande e Senzala.
Race in politics and ethics
Michel Foucault argued the popular historical and political use of a non-essentialist notion of "race" used in the "race struggle" discourse during the 1688 Glorious Revolution and under Louis XIV's end of reign. In Foucault's view, this discourse developed in two different directions: Marxism, which seized the notion and transformed it into "class struggle" discourse, and racists, biologists and eugenicists, who paved the way for 20th century "state racism".
During the Enlightenment, racial classifications were used to justify enslavement
of those deemed to be of "inferior", non-White races, and thus
supposedly best fitted for lives of toil under White supervision. These
classifications made the distance between races seem nearly as broad as
that between species, easing unsettling questions about the
appropriateness of such treatment of humans. The practice was at the
time generally accepted by both scientific and lay communities.
Arthur Gobineau's An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races (1853–1855) was one of the milestones in the new racist discourse, along with Vacher de Lapouge's "anthroposociology" and Johann Gottfried Herder (1744–1803), who applied race to nationalist theory to develop militant ethnic nationalism.
They posited the historical existence of national races such as German
and French, branching from basal races supposed to have existed for
millennia, such as the Aryan race, and believed political boundaries should mirror these supposed racial ones.
Later, one of Hitler's
favorite sayings was, "Politics is applied biology". Hitler's ideas of
racial purity led to unprecedented atrocities in Europe. Since then, ethnic cleansing has occurred in Cambodia, the Balkans, Sudan, and Rwanda. In one sense, ethnic cleansing is another name for the tribal warfare and mass murder that has afflicted human society for ages.
Racial inequality has been a concern of United States politicians
and legislators since the country's founding. In the 19th century most
White Americans (including abolitionists)
explained racial inequality as an inevitable consequence of biological
differences. Since the mid-20th century, political and civic leaders as
well as scientists have debated to what extent racial inequality is
cultural in origin. Some argue that current inequalities between Blacks
and Whites are primarily cultural and historical, the result of past and
present racism, slavery and segregation, and could be redressed through such programs as affirmative action and Head Start.
Others work to reduce tax funding of remedial programs for minorities.
They have based their advocacy on aptitude test data that, according to
them, shows that racial ability differences are biological in origin and
cannot be leveled even by intensive educational efforts. In electoral politics,
many more ethnic minorities have won important offices in Western
nations than in earlier times, although the highest offices tend to
remain in the hands of Whites.
In his famous Letter from Birmingham Jail, Martin Luther King Jr. observed:
- History is the long and tragic story of the fact that privileged groups seldom give up their privileges voluntarily. Individuals may see the moral light and voluntarily give up their unjust posture; but as Reinhold Niebuhr has reminded us, groups are more immoral than individuals.
King's hope, expressed in his I Have a Dream speech, was that the civil rights
struggle would one day produce a society where people were not "judged
by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character".
Because of the identification of the concept of race with
political oppression, many natural and social scientists today are wary
of using the word "race" to refer to human variation, but instead use
less emotive words such as "population" and "ethnicity". Some, however,
argue that the concept of race, whatever the term used, is nevertheless
of continuing utility and validity in scientific research.
Race in law enforcement
In an attempt to provide general descriptions that may facilitate the job of law enforcement officers seeking to apprehend suspects, the United States FBI
employs the term "race" to summarize the general appearance (skin
color, hair texture, eye shape, and other such easily noticed
characteristics) of individuals whom they are attempting to apprehend.
From the perspective of law enforcement officers, a description needs to
capture the features that stand out most clearly in the perception
within the given society.
Thus, in the UK, Scotland Yard use a classification based on the ethnic composition of British society: W1 (White British), W2 (White Irish), W9 (Other White);
M1 (White and black Caribbean), M2 (White and black African), M3 (White
and Asian), M9 (Any other mixed background); A1 (Asian-Indian), A2
(Asian-Pakistani), A3 (Asian-Bangladeshi), A9 (Any other Asian
background); B1 (Black Caribbean), B2 (Black African), B3 (Any other
black background); O1 (Chinese), O9 (Any other).
In the United States, the practice of racial profiling has been ruled to be both unconstitutional and also to constitute a violation of civil rights. There also an ongoing debate on the relationship between race and crime regarding the disproportional representation of certain minorities in all stages of the criminal justice system.
Studies in racial taxonomy based on DNA cluster analysis has led
law enforcement to pursue suspects based on their racial classification
as derived from their DNA evidence left at the crime scene. DNA analysis has been successful in helping police determine the race of both victims and perpetrators.
This classification is called "biogeographical ancestry".