A History of Affirmative Action, 1619-2000

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Univ. Press of Mississippi, Sep 18, 2009 - Business & Economics - 342 pages

What is it about affirmative action that makes this public policy one of the most contentious political issues in the United States today?

The answer to this question cannot be found by studying the recent past or current events. To understand the current debate over affirmative action, we must grapple with all of America's racial history, from colonial times, through slavery, Reconstruction, the Jim Crow era, the Civil Rights era, to the present day. Philip Rubio argues that misunderstanding the history of affirmative action is the principal reason that most white people have difficulty in seeing their historical and current privilege.

He combines African American, labor, and social history with thirty years of personal experience as a blue-collar worker, labor and community activist, jazz musician, and writer to examine the roots of this debate. He maintains that we are not asking the right question. The real issue, he argues, is not whether African Americans should receive compensatory treatment to correct past and present discrimination, but, rather, why whites should continue to receive preferences based on skin color.

He argues that America was conceived and continues to reshape itself not on a system of meritorious achievement or equal opportunity but on a system of white preferences and quotas that are defended both actively and passively by white people. Tracing the development of the old legal initiative known as "affirmative action" (based on the principle of equity in English common law), he shows how affirmative action today has become transformed in American folklore and popular culture into something akin to the "Black Power" slogan of the late 1960s. Rather than a new and radical program, he shows that affirmative action is only the most recent challenge to the system of white privilege brought about by a long tradition of black protest.

Affirmative action is not simply legislated public policy or voluntary corporate policy. Instead, as Rubio points out, it is a social history that represents a tug-of-war within working-class America over whether there should exist a property value in whiteness.

In presenting this history, Rubio is firm in the belief that, after the facts have spoken, readers not only will marvel that these programs are not even tougher but also will understand why.

 

Contents

Bonded Labor White Preferences and Quotas and American Citizenship Debates 16191861
1
Civil War Reconstruction and Americas First Affirmative Action Programs 186177
33
Segregation Immigration and How the Polish Became White in America 18771933
57
Black Labor Confronts the New White Deal 193345
90
White Suburbs Negro Quotas Red Scares and Black Demands 194555
114
Black Movement White Reaction and Affirmative Action from the Civil Rights Movement to ReaganBush 195593
135
Black Reparations White Ambivalence and Historical Memory 19932000
167
Notes
199
Bibliography
289
Index
317
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About the author (2009)

Philip F. Rubio is a Mellon Fellow studying history at Duke University.

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