Critical Race Theory: A Multicultural Disrupter

Author:

Reece Rai1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, Canada

Abstract

The field of sociology has largely ignored critical race theory (CRT) as a relevant theoretical and pedagogical framework for the study of white supremacy and Indigenous and Black race relations in Canada. In the United States, CRT has long been a theoretical framework tethered to and contextualizing the underpinnings of systemic racism and white supremacy as the cornerstone of structural oppression in American legal society. The initial focus of this work was to study the operationalization of the myriad ways in which race and racial power were constructed and represented in American law and society and the attendant ways in which Black civil rights under American law could never be achieved through the application of legal jurisprudence. CRT’s theoretical milieu has expanded beyond legal research to examine the sphere of racist structural oppression as systemically embedded in immigration, housing, education, employment, healthcare, and child welfare systems. The writing of this article has been an intentional active disruption to the claims that multiculturalism has the answers to race relations in an ever-changing Canadian society. While there are six main tenets of CRT, this article specifically focuses on three core tenets of CRT which argue that (1) racism is an ever-present dynamic of life in Canada; (2) racial subordination remains endemically tied to the political, cultural, and social milieu of white supremacy impacting the lives of Indigenous and Black peoples in Canada; and (3) racism has contributed to all historical and contemporary manifestations of structural oppression related to land theft and anti-Black racism. As such, CRT has much to contribute to race-radical research, pedagogy, and praxis when it comes to understanding race relations in a Canadian society grappling with an ever-changing multicultural narrative.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference113 articles.

1. Alexander, Taifha, Clark, LaToya Baldwin, Reinhard, Kyle, and Zatz, Noah (2024, April 17). CRT Forward: Tracking the Attack on Critical Race Theory. A Report from CRT Forward’s Tracking Project. An Initiative of the Critical Race Studies Program. UCLA School of Law Zatz, Critical Race Studies. Available online: https://crtforward.law.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/UCLA-Law_CRT-Report_Final.pdf.

2. Aylward, Carol A. (1999). Canadian Critical Race Theory: Racism and the Law, Fernwood.

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4. The contemporary reality of Canadian imperialism: Settler colonialism and the hybrid colonial state;Barker;American Indian Quarterly,2009

5. Basra, Amandeep (2021). Bridging the Gap: Addressing the Labour Market Barriers of Black Youth in Canada. [Master’s thesis, Simon Fraser University].

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