Race: Social Fact, Biological FictionPosted in Anthropology, Articles, New Media, Social Science on 2010-02-14 06:13Z by Steven |
Race: Social Fact, Biological Fiction
Focus on Adoption
Volume 17, Number 3
June/July 2009
pages 16-17
Andrew Martindale, Assistant Professor of Anthropology
University of British Columbia
Andrew Martindale, an adoptive parent, and assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, explains that the concept of race is man-made and, though it holds enormous power, has no biological basis.
…Why races exist
If races are not biological divisions, why do they exist? The answer is complex and partly that races exist because people want to believe they exist. Although race identities can lead to racism, they also have considerable value in social terms. People who have been marginalized historically, based on a flawed concept of race, find solidarity with people who share the same history. Ironically, the concept of race can have a positive role in repudiating racism. For this reason, the concept of race is not likely to disappear any time soon…
Read the entire article here.