Law is still black & white, not multiracial, Fordham prof saysPosted in Articles, Census/Demographics, Media Archive, Politics/Public Policy, United States on 2016-01-25 19:38Z by Steven |
Law is still black & white, not multiracial, Fordham prof says
University Times: The Faculty & Staff Newspaper Since 1968
University of Pittsburgh
2016-01-07
Marty Levine
Despite the fact that more people are identifying themselves as multiracial on the U.S. census, decisions in discrimination cases involving multiracial defendants still are primarily based on the presence of anti-black prejudice, and there is no need to change civil rights laws.
That was the message of Tanya Hernandez, professor of law at Fordham University, who delivered the final fall Buchanan, Ingersoll & Rooney lecture in the School of Social Work’s Center on Race and Social Problems last month.
Hernandez, author of “Racial Subordination in Latin America,” spoke on the topic “Multiracial in the Workplace: A New Kind of Discrimination?” She is studying mixed-race identity and discrimination law in the United States in preparation for her next book…
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