Race, Social Welfare Policy, and The Icarus Project

 

Race, Social Welfare Policy, and The Icarus Project

Sascha A. DuBrul

Social Work Policy I

Hunter College Silberman School of Social Work

 

Abstract: In this paper I will define the structure and operation of racism in general, the differences in the meaning of institutional or structural racism, overt racism, ethnocentrism, prejudice, discrimination, and oppression. I will then talk specifically about the mass incarceration of Black males in North America and its relationship to the history of chattel slavery and the policies of Jim Crow. I will briefly mention the racialized nature of the North American mental health system. Then I will turn my attention to the complex racial dynamics of the organization where I work, The Icarus Project, and how they have been articulated and addressed. I end with some strategies which might be useful for thinking about building bridges between The Icarus Project and social and political movements for racial justice.

“The biggest challenge in teaching about racism is to hold double vision. On the one hand, to continually point out that the seemingly real, obvious and biological foundations of racial categories are completely fabricated, constantly shifting and, in spite of their widespread acceptance, not obvious at all. On the other, to explicitly map, over and over again, the devastating injuries brought about by racism, and expose the ways that ideas of race are used to justify gross economic and social inequalities.” – Aurora Levins Morales (1998, P.79)

Introduction

I decided to pursue a degree in social work in large part because it is the only helping profession that aims to explicitly fight oppression and work for social justice. It is this acknowledgement of the forces of history and politics mixed with the more “clinical” tools and visions of psychodynamics and other therapeutic modalities that attracts both my mind and my heart. As someone who has spent a lot of time institutionalized in the psychiatric system and is committed to working towards a world that where no one ever has to go through what I’ve been through, I see a place for myself in social work. As a white man in a racist society, I have made it my business to understand the nature of racism and racial oppression so I can fight against it and be in solidarity with those who are fighting to get out from under it.

I see racism as a force that is oppressive to everyone involved, both the one’s primarily suffering from it and the ones economically and socially benefitting from that suffering. Like bell hooks has articulated, I see racism itself as “psychotic” (hooks, 2000): the history we have inherited and the ways we are taught to identify with it literally makes us crazy. I am very interested in how we can uproot systems of oppression, within our social institutions and our daily interactions. In this brief paper I will try and articulate some of what I’ve learned by doing the readings for class, and work towards something of what I hope can be a language I feel comfortable using in the future. By doing this reading and writing I feel like I am taking part in a critical conversation that will make it easier to join forces with others who are engaged in struggles for racial liberation.

Important Definitions

According to the National Association of Social Workers (NASW), Institutional or structural racism is defined as the social, economic, educational, and political forces or policies that operate to foster discrimination outcomes or give preference to members of one group over another (NASW, 2007).

Institutional racism is normative, sometimes legalized, and often manifests as inherited disadvantage. It is structural, having been codified in our institutions of custom, practice, and law, so there need not be an identifiable perpetrator. (Jones, 2000).

In the United States, the cognitive dissonance between the vales and beliefs of the Protestant founders for human rights, (liberty, justice, and democracy) lived alongside the practice of enslavement of Africans, the making of the Mexicans a foreign minority in the land of their birth, and genocide of Native Americans. This dissonance was resolved by classifying groups of people by virtue of their physical characteristics as being not only different but innately inferior and thereby unworthy to rights and entitlements. We are living with the legacy of this history every day of our lives.

The social work profession and the systems through which the profession has evolved historically and into the present, is part of a larger society in which policies, resources, and practices are designed to benefit some groups significantly more than others, while simultaneously denying the existence of racism as a variable, except in its most extreme forms.

Overt Racism

Racism is the practice of discrimination and prejudice based on racial classification, supported by the power to enforce that prejudice. Ethnocentrism is the view that one’s own group is the center of everything and that all things are judged based on ones own group. Prejudice is the negative (or positive/idealized) attitudes, thoughts, and beliefs about an entire category of people formed without full knowledge or examination of the facts. Discrimination is acting on the basis of prejudice. Discrimination is often codified by laws, regulations, and rules (NASW, 2007).

People experience oppression when they are deprived of human rights or dignity and are (or feel) powerless to do anything about it. Sometimes this takes the form of exclusion in which people are denied the opportunity to participate in a certain right, benefit, or privilege. Sometimes this takes the form of marginalization, in which people find that they are on the fringe of the political, social, or economic system.

It is important to note that the association between socioeconomic status and race in the United States has its origins in discrete historical events but persists because of contemporary structural factors that perpetuate those historical injustices (Jones, 2000).

The New Jim Crow

The Jim Crow laws were racial segregation laws enacted after the Reconstruction period in the Southern United States, at state and local levels, and which continued in force until 1965, which mandated racial segregation in all public facilities in Southern states of the former Confederacy, with, starting in 1890, a “separate but equal” status for African Americans. The separation in practice led to conditions for African Americans that were inferior to those provided for white Americans, systematizing a number of economic, educational and social disadvantages (Pitre, 1999).

Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow, uses the term racial caste in her book the way it is used in common parlance to denote “a stigmatized racial group locked into an inferior position by law and custom” (Alexander, 2010, P.11). Her argument is that Jim Crow and slavery were caste systems, and therefore so is our current system of mass incarceration. For Alexander, the term mass incarceration refers not only to the criminal justice system but also to the “larger webs of laws, rules, policies, and customs that control those labeled criminals both in and out of prison. Once released, a former prisoner enters a hidden underworld of legalized discrimination and permanent social exclusion.” (Alexander, P.12)

According to Alexander (2010), what has has changed since the collapse of Jim Crow has less to do with the basic structure of our society then with the language we used to justify severe inequality. In the era of colorblindness, it is no longer socially permissible to use race, explicitly, as justification for discrimination , expulsion, or social contempt. Rather we use our criminal justice system to associate criminality with people of color. Today it is legal to discriminate against ex-offenders in ways it was ones legal to discriminate against African Americans. This has horrible consequences for our entire society. (Alexander, 2010)

“Imprisonment, they say, now creates far more crime then it prevents, by ripping apart fragile social networks, destroying families, and creating a permanent class of unemployables….by locking millions of people out of the mainstream legal economy, by making it difficult or impossible for people to find housing or feed themselves, and by destroying familial bonds by warehousing millions for minor crimes, we make crime more—not less—likely in the most vulnerable communities.” (Alexander, 2010, P. 237)

As a nation, we have managed to create a massive system of control that locks a significant percentage of our population – a group largely defined by race – into a permanent, second class status, This is not the fault of one political party. It is not merely the fault of biased police, prosecutors, or judges. We have all been complicit in the emergence of mass incarceration in the United States. In the so-called era of colorblindness, we have become blind not so much to trace as to the re-emergence of caste in America. We have turned away from those labeled “criminals”,” viewing them as “others” unworthy of our concern. Some of us have been complicit by remaining silent, even as we have a sneaking suspicion that something has gone horribly wrong. We must break that silence and awaken to the human-rights nightmare that is occurring on our watch. (Alexander, 2010)

Disability Incarcerated

The three largest contemporary psychiatric facilities in North America are jails: Cooks County Jail in Chicago, L.A. County Jail, and Rikers Island in New York. This is a direct consequence of the closure of psychiatric institutions called for by progressive deinstitutionalization advocacy back in the 1970s and this current crisis is also an outcome of strategies proposed to trim national and state budgets. In general, current policies of mass incarceration have led to a daily census count in US jails, prisons, and other sites of imprisonment of almost two and a half million people. (Ben-Moshe, 2014) According to some studies, correctional facilities now hold 95 percent of all institutionalized people with mental illnesses. (Winerip, 2014) The nature of “mental illness” is complicated in itself. According to the Western medical model, it is caused by “chemical imbalances” in our brains, but from a social work perspective most “mental illness” is caused by oppression: racism, sexism, poverty, and other forms of injustice. There is some writing about the relationship between “mental illness” and racism (Metzl, 2010), but often the conversations are happening in different places with different people.

 

The Icarus Project

The Icarus Project is a support network and media project by and for people who experience the world in ways that are often diagnosed as mental illness. (The Icarus Project, 2014). It has existed for 12 years as a website and a community of unconventional support groups. It was initially founded by two economically privileged and educated white people as a place where folks who were looking for alternatives to the psychiatric system could share ideas and support one another. It has grow into a community that has touched the lives of many thousands of people and is helping to change the language and culture of what gets called mental health and mental illness. (DuBrul, 2014).

The people who started The Icarus Project were not thinking deeply about racism and race dynamics when they started the organization. Much of the culture of Icarus initially came from anarchism and punk rock activist traveler culture going back to the counterculture of the 1960s, which has very white roots (Duncombe, 2011). While we didn’t use the language of “colorblindness” (Abrams, 2009) we played right into the classic liberal trap of colorblindness. It was only some years into the work that it became clear how divided our experience as middle-class white people were from the majority of poor and working class people of color interfacing with the psychiatric system. As a mostly web based community, race was not initially an issue at the forefront of the project. It was only when we started meeting face to face, and groups started forming around the country, that the problematic racial dynamics began to surface.

One of the most confounding issues related to race has to do with the way that mental health issues and and what are considered “racial microaggressions” intersect in a group setting. Derald Wing Sue defines microaggressions as brief, everyday exchanges that send denigrating messages to certain individuals because of their group membership. Sue describes microaggressions at generally happening below the level of awareness of well-intentioned members of the dominant culture. Microaggressions are considered to be different from overt, deliberate acts of bigotry, such as the use of racist epithets, because the people perpetrating microaggressions often intend no offense and are unaware they are causing harm. (Sue, 2007)

As a majority white community, that is also almost entirely composed of people who struggle with serious mental health issues, there is a way that what might be seen as microaggressions are sometimes the behavior of folks who have a hard time relating to anyone. It is a complex knot to unravel.

On an organizational level, our national collective, which has grown and shrunk over the years (depending on funding,) has, up until recently, been an entirely white staff. Over the course of this past year we have had a number of consultants from different ethnic and racial backgrounds. One issue that has come up has been the language we use to talk about race. At one point in the year we had an Argentinian with light skin, a dark skinned Trinidadian with East Indian heritage, a Jamaican-American , and a handful of Jews and others with European ancestry. The activist culture most of us come from is comfortable using the language of “white” and “ people of color” to explicitly call out the culture of White Supremacy (Kivel, 1995). But our Argentinian and Trinidadian co-workers found it confusing and offensive.

In our attempts to become a multi-racial organization, we have gone through growing pains. In this past year we also hired a person of color as a “diversity trainer” who then quit because of the racist behavior of one staff member and our inability as an organization to keep her in check. We then fired her, and hired an “operations support coordinator” to develop our HR department and create internal policies to make our organization a safe place to work for everyone. After our big blow-up, we had some community allies from an organization called Anti-Oppression Resources and Training Alliance (AORTA) assess our situation. This is what they had to say about racism and The Icarus Project:

“A commitment to becoming an anti-racist, multi-racial organization means…that the organization needs to be committed to addressing instances of racism when people of color bring them up. It means carving out time for the group as a whole to have those nuanced, complex and very real conversations about race in a global context. It also means committing to doing the political education necessary so that white folks in the organization do not get defensive when their actions are labeled as racist, and creating or identifying support systems of other white anti-racist folks for those folks to turn to for mentorship and support. It also means creating support systems for staff of color so that they don’t feel isolated, alone, or that white folks aren’t stepping up in addressing behaviors and words that perpetuate systemic racism…

If the group does decide that it wants to have anti-oppressive organizational transformation as a goal, prioritize talking about race, class, and gender. These three are really impacting the relationships in the group, and aligning individual understandings and building political unity around these three will be key for being able to move forward with this work.” (AORTA, 2014)

Moving Forward

We have a lot of work to do to become an anti-racist, multi-racial organization. Without realizing it, we developed an organization that was ethnocentric towards white culture and excluded and marginalized the experiences of the global majority. It is a common issue in non-profit and many activist movements and communities that have their origins in white culture.

The Icarus Project is in the process of developing an advisory board that will have a number of people of color on it. We will have to work hard to develop a culture where their voices are raised up above the majority white voices who already have years of experience with Icarus. We also just hired a national organizer who is Latina and who will hopefully be able to work with our emerging dynamics. We will need to make sure to both create space to talk openly about dynamics related to oppression and to make sure everyone feels supported and has allies to talk to when things get hard.

Our only hope of growing as an organization and building a relevant movement is by centering the experiences of people of color and grappling with the White Supremacy that clearly causes so much suffering and “mental illness”. How will our base of majority white users that struggle with mental health issues grow and co-exist with the people of color from more marginalized backgrounds? How will we explicitly reshape the culture of our community? It remains to be seen.

What is clear is that if there aren’t shared values that prioritize collective liberation (and foregrounding racial justice) then hierarchies from our greater society will inevitably trickle in: the ones who feel entitled to take space will take it, the marginalized will be pushed to the side or get angry and leave. And our internal dynamics will reflect the quality of the work we do on the outside. There are people who are doing really good work around these issues and are examples of organizations founded by white people that are now led by people of color (the Allied Media Conference). But there is so much unresolved trauma around issues of race and oppression. There is also so much potential for good work at the intersection of racial justice and mental health. After reading The New Jim Crow (Alexander, 2010) and making my way though the recently published collection Disability Incarcerated (Ben-Moshe, 2014), I am excited about helping to build bridges between these growing movements.

Conclusion

I finished this paper as the verdict is waiting to come down for the officer who shot and killed Mike Brown in Ferguson, MI and there are people gathered in the streets in cities all over the country waiting in protest. I’m in solidarity in front of my laptop, wrestling with the basics. We have a hard road ahead of us, but it least there is no lack of good work to do.

“But if the movement that emerges to end mass incarceration does not meaningfully address the racial divisions and resentments that gave rise to mass incarceration, and if it fails to cultivate an ethic of of genuine care, compassion, and concern for every human being—of every class, race, and nationality—within our nation’s borders, including poor whites, who are often pitted against poor people of color, the collapse of mass incarceration will not mean the death of racial caste in America.” Michelle Alexander (2010, P. 256)

References

Abrams, L. S., & Moio, J. A. (2009). Critical race theory and the cultural competence dilemma in social work education. Journal of Social Work Education, 45(2), 245-261.

Alexander, M. (2012). The new Jim Crow: Mass incarceration in the age of colorblindness. The New Press.

Anti-Oppression Resource and Training Alliance (AORTA) (2014). THE ICARUS PROJECT ORGANIZATIONAL CONFLICT: REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS APRIL 2014

Ben-Moshe, L., Chapman, C., & Carey, A. C. (Eds.). (2014). Disability Incarcerated: Imprisonment and Disability in the United States and Canada. Palgrave Macmillan.

DuBrul, S. A. (2014). The Icarus Project: A Counter Narrative for Psychic Diversity. Journal of Medical Humanities, 35(3), 257-271.

Duncombe, S., & Tremblay, M. (2011). White riot: Punk rock and the politics of race. London: Verso.

Jones, C. P. (2000). Levels of racism: a theoretic framework and a gardener’s tale. American journal of public health, 90(8), 1212.

Kivel, P. (1995). Uprooting racism: How white people can work for racial justice. Philadelphia, PA: New Society Publishers.

Levins Morales, A. (1998). Medicine stories: History, culture and the politics of integrity. Cambridge: South End P.

Metzl, J., & ebrary, I. (2010). The protest psychosis: How schizophrenia became a black disease. Boston: Beacon Press.

National Association of Social Workers. (2007). Institutional racism & the social work profession: A call to action.

Pitre, M. (1999). In struggle against Jim Crow: Lulu B. White and the NAACP, 1900-1957 (First edition.). College Station: Texas A&M University Press.

Sue, D. W., Capodilupo, C. M., Torino, G. C., Bucceri, J. M., Holder, A., Nadal, K. L., & Esquilin, M. (2007). Racial microaggressions in everyday life: implications for clinical practice. American psychologist, 62(4), 271.

The Icarus Project (2014) The Icarus Project Mission Statement. Retrieved from: http://www.theicarusproject.net/about-us/icarus-project-mission-statement

Winerip M, Schwirtz M. Rikers: Where mental illness meets brutality in jail. New York Times 2014; 14 July. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/14/nyregion/rikers-study-finds-prisoners-injured-by-employees.html (accessed 28 July 2014).

Comments

comments

Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply