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Florida’s Anti-Woke Laws Deny Existence of Systemic Racism
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ disdain for “woke ideology” is on full display.
At a January 2023 inaugural event, the governor that “Florida is where woke goes to die.”&Բ;
This is more than political bluster.
In just the past month, DeSantis has stacked the board of the , a well-known liberal arts college, with , and has directed universities to report their to his office.
So what, precisely, does Desantis——oDz?&Բ;
That became clear in December 2022 when multiple DeSantis officials appeared before a to defend the governor’s decision to suspend a local prosecutor whom DeSantis had termed a “woke ideologue.” The judge asked Ryan Newman, DeSantis’ general counsel, to define “woke.”&Բ;
Newman answered that “woke” is “the belief there are systemic injustices in American society and the need to address them.”&Բ;
Newman added that DeSantis does not believe systemic injustices exist in the United States.
DeSantis, for his part, has explicitly denied that systemic racism exists—characterizing the notion as “.”&Բ;
In my view as a , Newman’s explanation was a stark admission.
By his own account, Newman placed DeSantis on the side of injustice. We might call DeSantis an “injustice denier.” Akin to climate change, there is no legitimate academic debate about the reality of systemic racism.
’s&Բ;. ’s&Բ;. It’s unjust. No amount of denial can change that—even if it scores political points.
Political Campaign Against “Woke”
When and their claim is not that schools should be value-free zones.
Their claim is that schools .
This should surprise no one.
In the wake of 2020’s for racial justice, launched an open to stigmatize modest efforts to make American classrooms more inclusive and curriculum more comprehensive.
As early as March 2021, one of the campaign’s chief architects, Christopher Rufo, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, publicly about weaponizing critical race theory to .
Rufo further explained that maligning critical race theory through calculated caricature and distortion was an “obvious” element of a “” to erode faith in public schools.
Rufo, one of DeSantis’ recent board appointees, has outlined the end goal: “” and return Americans to a pre-civil-rights social order that lacked affirmative commitments to racial inclusion.
A Long History of White Resistance
Proponents often claim that laws and policies designed to restrict classroom conversations about race are mostly white students from .
Yet over two years into an open disinformation campaign and hundreds of laws designed to suppress “woke” viewpoints, many in the mainstream media still frame anti-racism and anti-anti-racism as competing sides in an educational culture war.
In my view, the culture war framing is odd.
It exaggerates disagreement among typical Americans—most of whom and . It a top-down political project as a grassroots uprising. And it minimizes the on students, parents, and educators.
The “culture war” frame also implies Americans are fighting over values, yet rarely makes explicit those competing values.
One thing is clear.
There is little new about this culture war.
It is hard to miss the parallels in rhetoric and tactics between 21st-century anti-anti-racism and 20th-century , when segregationists openly defied federal court orders to integrate public schools.
Past generations have invoked “,” “,” and “” to defend the prevailing social order, defund public schools, and discredit efforts to redistribute racial power.
In my view, many of today’s anti-anti-racists rehearse the same old rhetoric for similar ends.
Past generations harnessed state power to penalize educators who dared to teach about injustice.
Historian one example from 1956 South Carolina.
Two years after , South Carolina’s enacted 14 laws designed to stymie civil rights.
This included a law that required all teachers to swear an anti-NAACP oath—a law designed to target Black educators and “destabilize the civil rights movement,” as Cunningham explains.
Impact on Cultural Literacy
A revival of such measures has occurred since 2020.
In at least 15 states, GOP officials have passed “” to chill classroom conversations about race, racism, and related topics. This includes Florida’s “Stop WOKE Act,” a portion of which in November 2022.
Given the laws’ design and effect, University of Florida law professor Katheryn Russell-Brown has likened this legislation to .
According to free speech advocacy group PEN America, 2022 saw a 250% jump in such , which became more punitive and more likely to target higher education and LGBTQ identities.
Similar policies have accelerated at the local level across the country.
As of December 2022, UCLA’s CRT Forward Tracking Project over 130 school district policies that target anti-racist pedagogy and curriculum.
A related study from found that state and local anti-literacy laws affected over 900 districts, accounting for 35% of America’s K-12 students.
Given that 2022 saw , that number is no doubt higher now.
Academic Freedom Under State Review
Many of the same GOP officials pushing anti-literacy laws are also actively eroding key safeguards that shield public universities and professors from political interference.
Not surprisingly, DeSantis is a of such efforts to curb university independence.
In Texas, the lieutenant governor after the University of Texas’ faculty leadership reaffirmed the value of academic freedom and the right to teach about race and gender justice.
Right-wing groups also have fueled against school leaders, teachers, and librarians.
Many of the same groups have spearheaded an unprecedented wave of book bans.
tallied over 2,500 individual bans from July 2021 to June 2022.
This includes books like When Wilma Rudolph Played Basketball, which explores how an to win medals in the 1956 and 1960 Olympics.
Experts have attributed the extreme rhetoric accompanying book bans and anti-literacy laws to a rise in . This includes nearly —a twelvefold increase over 2020—and bomb threats and other entities .
Against this backdrop, it is notable that the midterm elections revealed the .
But those limitations seem unlikely to alter GOP talking points or the broader assault on public education.
The incoming GOP House leadership has already renewed its pledge to purge schools of critical race theory and “woke ideology.”
To borrow a phrase from the late Supreme Court Justice William Brennan, one might conclude that anti-anti-racism embodies a “.”
This article was originally published by . It has been republished here with permission.
Jonathan Feingold
is the Associate Professor of Law at Boston University. Feingold’s scholarship explores the relationship between race, law, and the mind sciences. Much of his recent research has interrogated how and why various American legal regimes, including equal protection doctrine, function to reinforce and reproduce racial hierarchy.
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