
But identity politics have been integral to social change in the United States through challenging racial oppression produced by all sides of the political spectrum. Identity politics unmasked the injustices of Jim Crow laws, the xenophobia of English-Only policies and more recently the racism of mass incarceration. Identity politics have also pointed to the ways that colorblind discourse prominent in many liberal circles serves as a tool for the continued maintenance of white supremacy. And identity politics have also pointed to the ways that a purely social class analysis will never get to the root of the inequities of US society, which has white supremacy at the core of its institutions.
So identity politics is not the problem. White supremacy is the problem. That said, neoliberal identity politics that seeks inclusion within white supremacist institutions is not the solution. Instead, we need a radical transformation of our institutions in ways that dismantle the white supremacy that lie at their core. Radical identity politics must play a role in this transformation.
Dr. Nelson Flores is a professor at the University of Pennsylvania. He has a Ph.D. in Urban Education from the CUNY Graduate Center. His research attempts to bridge theory and practice in ways that transform educational programming for language minoritized students.
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