后德班回合反种族主义倡议的政治经济学

The Political Economy of Antiracism Initiatives in the Post-Durban Round

American Economic Review · 2003
被引 0
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

指出经济学对种族主义的定义和理论不足,并呼吁研究反种族主义组织,适合关注种族歧视的经济学者和政治学者。

Abstract

Economists understand racial discrimination to mean differential treatment of identically situated individuals of different races. While this conceptualization permits detection and measurement of racially disparate market and nonmarket outcomes (Myers, 1993), it leaves unanswered the questions of how and why such differential treatment might arise and persist. Racism, or racial prejudice, is often alluded to as the underlying causal factor. But there is no coherent theory of racism in the body of economics literature. The dominant theories (the statistical discrimination and the Beckerian taste-for-discrimination theories) for the most part do not address the causes of racial prejudice, nor how it can persist even when discrimination by race is no longer permissible. Racism in its more narrow definition, as the belief in the inherent inferiority of a racial group, is even less well understood within the corpus of the economics literature. Just as the literature offers no clear consensus on what racism is, it similarly has virtually nothing to say about the organizations that fight racism. While there remains important theoretical room for understanding the problem of racism, it is just as important to understand the solution-makers that call themselves antiracism organizations.

种族歧视反种族主义组织经济学理论缺失德班会议后