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WGG English Racism Schütz

What is systemic racism? Here's what it means and how you can help dismantle it

N'DEA YANCEY-BRAGG | USA TODAY

Over the summer, thousands took to the streets in the wake of George Floyd's death to
demand an end to police brutality and racism. At the same time, the coronavirus pandemic,
which has disproportionally affected African Americans in communities across the country,
continues to spread.
"This is not about one incident," said NAACP President Derrick Johnson. "This is about the
systemic and pervasive nature of racism in this nation that must be addressed."
Here's what you need to know about systemic racism.

What is systemic racism?

Johnson defined systemic racism, also called structural racism or institutional


racism, as "systems and structures that have procedures or processes that disadvantage
African Americans."
Glenn Harris, president of Race Forward and publisher of Colorlines, defined it as "the complex
interaction of culture, policy and institutions that holds in place the outcomes we see in our
lives."
"Systemic racism is naming the process of white supremacy," Harris said.
Harris said systemic racism creates disparities in many "success indicators" including wealth,
the criminal justice system, employment, housing, health care, politics and education. He said
that although the concept dates back to work done by scholar and civil rights pioneer W. E. B.
Du Bois, the concept was first named during the civil rights movement of the 1960s and was
further refined in the 1980s.

How does systemic racism affect people of color?

Structural racism prevents or makes it more challenging for people of color to participate in
society and in the economy. While structural racism manifests itself in what appears to be
separate institutions, Harris emphasized that factors like housing insecurity, the racial wealth
gap, education and policing are intimately connected.
Harris used the example of housing, explaining that today, a disproportionate number of
people of color are homeless or lack housing security in part due to the legacy of
redlining. Black people make up nearly half of the homeless population, despite making up only
13% of the population, according to a Department of Housing and Urban Development
report presented to Congress in January.
Redlining refers to the system used by banks and the real estate industry in the 20th century to
determine which neighborhoods would get loans to buy homes, and neighborhoods where
people of color lived — outlined in red ink — were deemed the riskiest to invest in.
WGG English Racism Schütz

"Redlining basically meant it was fundamentally impossible for Black and brown people to
get loans," Harris said. "It was an active way of enforcing segregation."
This practice prevented Black families from amassing and maintaining wealth in the same way
that white families could, resulting in the growth of the racial wealth gap and housing
insecurity which persists today, Harris said. The net worth of a typical white family ($171,000)
is nearly 10 times greater than that of a Black family ($17,150), according to the Federal
Reserve's 2016 Survey of Consumer Finances.
Redlining was banned in 1968, but the areas deemed "hazardous" by the federal Home
Owners’ Loan Corp. from 1935 to 1939 are still much more likely than other areas to be home
to lower-income, minority residents, a 2018 study by the National Community Reinvestment
Coalition found.
Harris said the areas that were redlined also didn't have the tax base to support robust public
schools, health care systems or transportation, leading to issues of public safety and thus over-
policing.
"The system is set up in that way structurally to drive a continuous outcome of disinvestment
and therefore disproportionate outcomes," Harris said. "And at its worst, these most heinous
outcomes of over-policing that result ultimately in the loss of life."
Harris noted that this is just one example and this type of analysis could be applied to issues
of voting rights, employment, health disparities as well.

How can systemic racism be addressed?

Both Johnson and Harris say that not enough progress has been made in the fight against
systemic racism.
Johnson outlined three steps people can take to address systemic racism. We must
"acknowledge that racism actually exists," get involved with organizations that are fighting it,
and finally elect leaders and policy makers who won't reinforce or support structurally racist
policies.
"Racism is not a partisan issue, and we need to stop making it a partisan issue," Johnson said.
"It's a question of morality."
Harris said individuals doing personal work to understand systemic racism is "necessary, yet it's
so not sufficient." He urged those wanting to enact change to join those protesting in the
streets and to demand fundamental change from institutions in their own lives.
"It requires us to move beyond reform," he said. "Articulate clearly that the current system is
not working."

Your tasks:

1. Look up new vocabulary


2. What is racism? Find a definition.
3. In your own words: what is meant by structural or systemic racism?
WGG English Racism Schütz

4. What is redlining?
5. How has the process of redlining contributed to more injustice between black and
white areas in the US?
6. Where does racism happen?
7. What can be done to address racism, according to the text?
8. Where does racism happen in Germany? Give some examples.
9. In your opinion, why does racism exist?
10. What can we personally do to free ourselves from any racist / xenophobic attitudes?

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