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23 CUNY L. Rev. 139 (2020)
Dismantling the Pillars of White Supremacy: Obstacles in Eliminating Disparities and Achieving Racial Justice

handle is hein.journals/nyclr23 and id is 147 raw text is: 









      DISMANTLING THE PILLARS OF WHITE
    SUPREMACY: OBSTACLES IN ELIMINATING
 DISPARITIES AND ACHIEVING RACIAL JUSTICE

                           Kevin E. Jasont


    INTRODUCTION  ....................................................................... 140
    I. A TALE OF TWO AMERICAS  STILL PERSISTS TODAY  BETWEEN
        PEOPLE OF COLOR  AND WHITES  ....................................... 142
    II. THE FOUR PILLARS OF WHITE  SUPREMACY:  A PROPOSED
        FRAMEWORK   AND  ILLUSTRATION THROUGH   HOUSING
        POLICIES........................................................................... 148
        A. Recognizing the Four Pillars of White Supremacy..... 148
        B. The Four Pillars at Work in Government-Led and
           Government-Sanctioned  Housing  Policies................ 152
           1. How  Early Housing Policies Utilized Both Race-
               Motivated Impairments  and Race-Motivated
               Benefits to Create Wealth in White
               Communities  ....................................................... 153
           2. How  Colorblind Impairments and Colorblind
               Benefits Continued to Widen the Housing Gap
               Between  Whites and Blacks................................ 157
    III. PROPOSALS FOR AND OBSTACLES  TO DISMANTLING   THE
        PILLARS OF WHITE SUPREMACY   ....................................... 159
        A. Remedying Racial Injustice Pillar by Pillar: A Practical
           and Philosophical Endeavor ..................................... 160
       B. Litigation Efforts and the Obstacles to Undoing Racial
           Injustice ..................................................................... 163



   T Kevin E. Jason is Assistant Counsel at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, Inc. However, all opinions (and any errors) belong solely to the author. The author
thanks Julisa Perez and the other student activists and youth leaders with IntegrateNYC and
Teens Take Charge for sharing their stories and showing tremendous courage and leadership
throughout this chapter of New York City's segregation crisis. The author also thanks Phil
Desgranges, Nicole Triplett, Rashida Richardson, Toni Smith-Thompson, and Kerrel Murray
for their insights and for serving as thought partners on the difficult questions regarding racial
justice in history and in the future. The author thanks Shyenne Medina, Mira de Jong, and the
rest of the staff of the CUNY Law Review for their meticulous work, thoughtful contributions,
and limitless patience. Finally, the author thanks his endlessly supportive wife, Megan Byrne,
for her feedback, opinions, brilliance, and patience during this writing process and each en-
deavor the author has pursued over the years.


139

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