François Hollande’s misguided move: taking ‘race’ out of the constitutionPosted in Articles, Europe, Law, Media Archive, Politics/Public Policy, Social Science on 2013-02-12 18:31Z by Steven |
François Hollande’s misguided move: taking ‘race’ out of the constitution
The Guardian
2013-02-12
Alana Lentin, Senior Lecturer in Cultural and Social Analysis
University of Western Sydney
Valérie Amiraux, Professor of Sociology
University of Montreal
Not talking about races does not lead naturally to the demise of ‘race thinking’ – it just obscures the persistent inequalities
It’s become something of a commonplace to speak of the US as having entered a post-racial age. Both the right and the left have heralded the end of race, either triumphantly or as a way of dismissing talk of racism as so much political correctness. However, in Europe, the debate about race – post- or otherwise – is virtually non-existent compared with North America, where race never really goes away as a topic no matter how much people wish it would. Which is why it is surprising that the issue has become a significant part of François Hollande’s term in office. During the French presidential elections last spring, the Socialist candidate pledged to remove the word “race” from the French constitution. Currently, it states that “France shall be an indivisible, secular, democratic and social republic. It guarantees equality before the law for all citizens without distinction of origin, race or religion.” He is promising to effect that change before the summer…
…If ending racism were as simple as banning the one word, racism would be a thing of the past in Europe where, following the Holocaust, “race” was rightly declared a scientifically bogus term and officially dismissed as adding nothing to the understanding of human difference. However, racism did not simply melt away, as the French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, whose participation in the UNESCO anti-racist project which led the charge against race from the early 1950s, admitted later…
Read the entire article here.