The Desire for Whiteness: Can Law and Economics Explain It?
Bhattacharya
Shilpi
author
Columbia University. Law
originator
text
Articles
2012
English
This Essay provides a new theoretical perspective on colorism by considering it from an economic point of view. It relies on three theories of law and economics that explain racism. While critiquing these theories, it also extends them to evaluate colorism. Because these theories correlate race with skin color, applying these theories to colorism requires distinguishing colorism from racism using the "desire for whiteness" as a tool for analysis. Further, this Article provides a comparative perspective of colorism in the traditional American labor market and the Indian arranged marriage "market." It finds that: (a) these theories are able to provide some insight into why decisions in these markets are colorist; (b) the insights are incomplete and do not fully explain the complexities of colorist interactions, though they do explain some of colorism's history; (c) the Indian arranged marriage market strengthens these theories; and (d) only McAdams's status production theory is able to deliver an account of the desire for whiteness. It concludes that a legal framework relating to colorism should aim to eliminate this desire from society.
Law
Economics
Columbia Journal of Race and Law
2
1
117
147
2012
2155-2401
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:15028
NNC
NNC
2012-10-20 01:27:09 -0400
2012-10-22 16:36:49 -0400
9031
eng