The Constraint of Race. Legacies of White Skin Privilege in America

The Constraint of Race. Legacies of White Skin Privilege in America

Linda Faye Williams
The Constraint of Race. Legacies of White Skin Privilege in America

The Constraint of Race. Legacies of White Skin Privilege in America

🌐🌐🌐 The Constraint of Race offers a challenging new approach to understanding the evolution of American social policy and the racial politics shaping it. Rather than focusing on the disadvantages suffered by blacks in the American welfare state, Linda Faye Williams looks at the other side of the coin: the advantages enjoyed by whites. Her hope is that rendering the benefits of white skin privilege more visible will help undermine their acceptance as normal and motivate renewed efforts toward achieving a more just and equitable society. Williams begins her analysis by comparing two programs of federal provision in the mid-nineteenth century-the Freedmens Bureau and the Civil War Veterans Pension system. Already at this early stage of its development, she shows, the emerging welfare state effectively denied blacks the protections it provided white Americans and simultaneously stigmatized blacks as welfare dependents. The linkages among race, moral worthiness, and social policy established then have persisted to the present. Her reexamination of key episodes in the later evolution of the American welfare state from the New Deal through the Clinton administration reveals how developments in social policy have advanced the privileges attached to whiteness by a variety of mechanisms: the ongoing reinterpretation of the American tradition of liberal individualism in racialized ways; the slow accretion of policy legacies; the construction...


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