This essay examines interconnections between "race" and economic inequality in the United States, focusing on the case of African-Americans. I will argue that it is crucially important to distinguish between racial discrimination and racial stigma in the study of this problem. Racial discrimination has to do with how blacks are treated, while racial stigma is concerned with how black people are perceived. My view is that what I call reward bias (unfair treatment of persons in formal economic transactions based on racial identity) is now a less significant barrier to the full participation by African-Americans in U.S. society than is what I will call development bias (blocked access to resources critical for personal development but available only via non-market-mediated social transactions). By making these points in the specific cultural and historical context of the black experience in U.S. society, I hope to contribute to a deeper conceptualization of the worldwide problem of race and economic marginality.
[1]
J. C. Brown,et al.
The Anatomy of Racial Inequality
,
2003
.
[2]
P. Gilroy.
Against Race: Imagining Political Culture beyond the Color Line
,
2000
.
[3]
Steve Olson.
Mapping human history : discovering the past through our genes
,
2002
.
[4]
Arnold M. Rose,et al.
An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy.
,
1944
.
[5]
L. Cavalli-Sforza.
Genes, peoples and languages.
,
1991,
Scientific American.
[6]
G. Myrdal,et al.
An American Dilemma. The Negro problem and Modern Democracy. Volume II.
,
1944
.