I've been blogging for some time now about how reparations talk is persisting in the academy. And now I want to call attention to another sign that the discussion of reparations is persisting -- that there is new literature arguing against reparations. Larry Alexander and Maimon Schwarzschild now have a book review essay, entitled "Race Matters," of David Boonin's book Should Race Matter? up on ssrn. Here is their abstract:
One frequently hears that America has a race problem. We agree, but the race problem we identify is not what is usually meant by those who invoke it. It is not discrimination, intentional or otherwise, but rather obsession with race that is America’s more consequential “race problem” today. America has vanquished slavery, segregation, and long-standing racial discrimination only to succumb to an almost equally destructive race obsession. Despite the biological arbitrariness of dividing a single, interbreeding biological species into “races,” despite the sorry history legally and socially of the use of race, and despite the civil rights movement’s original ambition to substitute the content of character for the color of skin as the basis of decision making, America today is in many ways as race conscious as it was in the era of Jim Crow.
For that reason we welcome David Boonin’s Should Race Matter? Boonin takes up five topics that constitute a good portion of the current obsession — reparations, affirmative action, hate speech, hate crimes, and profiling — and he subjects each to philosophical scrutiny. Boonin is sober and fair minded in tone, and purports to be careful and comprehensive in method. Unlike many discussions of race, Boonin’s tries to shed light, not heat. He deserves to be read by everyone who takes a serious interest in public policy as it bears on race.
Boonin’s book has its limitations, as we will suggest. Moreover, Boonin discusses only race, not sex, ethnicity, nationality, religion, disability, or sexual preference, although most of the policies he considers have been urged or actually extended beyond race to some or all of these other categories. Nonetheless, Boonin’s analyses of these policies as they bear on race would have direct implications for these other categories. Given that Boonin takes 350 pages to examine five racial policies, we think limiting his focus to race was quite justifiable.
Although we believe Boonin’s is a worthwhile treatment of contemporary racial policies, we take issue with him on several points. We think that his arguments in support of affirmative action and hate crimes are incomplete and thus unpersuasive, and we consider his case for reparations a failure on its own terms. Nonetheless, we admire the effort at fair-mindedness and the care with which he makes the case for these policies.
About a decade back I pointed to the emergence of anti-reparations literature as a sign that the field was maturing. Perhaps the fact that two important scholars are again engaging with the anti-reparations arguments suggests the vitality of the field.
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