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86 Denv. U. L. Rev. 785 (2008-2009)
Post-Racialism or Targeted Universalism

handle is hein.journals/denlr86 and id is 791 raw text is: POST-RACIALISM OR TARGETED UNIVERSALISM?
john a. powelit
The United States made history on November 4, 2008 by electing
Barack Obama as the first African-American President of the United
States. This remarkable event has generated a sense of pride and a col-
lective celebration that is shared worldwide. The installation of a Black
President, whose election was supported by a significant minority of
white American voters, is an occasion imbued with meaning. The politi-
cal, social, historical, and cultural significance of the election has been
expressed in many ways and interpreted differently in different quarters.'
Over the next several months, if not years, Americans will be trying to
determine its contours, synthesizing its various strands. As we engage
this consequential process, different segments of society will undoubted-
ly continue to express and promote different meanings, each of which
will have important ramifications. Questions will emerge, such as how
are we to understand racial conditions in society, and what is the proper
role of public policy and law for addressing or avoiding racial questions?
These questions about where we are as a society on the issue of race are
not just factual or descriptive, but are deeply political, having implica-
tions for how and when we respond to existing racial conditions and the
scope of our collective obligations.
In exploring this set of questions, I employ a different terminology
than what is normally used to discuss this issue. Instead of using the
standard nomenclature of race and racism, I will use the term racializa-
tion. I do so because the language of race and racism is understood in a
way that is too limited and specific to help us acquire greater insight into
the important questions posed at the outset. By racialization, I refer to
the set of practices, cultural norms, and institutional arrangements that
are both reflective of and simultaneously help to create and maintain
racialized outcomes in society. Because racialization is a historical and
cultural set of processes, it does not have one meaning. Instead, it is a set
of conditions and norms that are constantly evolving and interacting with
t  john a. powell is the Williams Chair in Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, Moritz College of
Law, the Ohio State University and Executive Director, Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and
Ethnicity, the Ohio State University. The author does not capitalize his name. I would like to thank
Jessica Larson and Stephen Menendian for their research assistance.
1. Already, there are claims being advanced that Section 5 pre-clearance provisions of the
Voting Rights Act are no longer necessary, since they are predicated on polarized racial voting
patterns, which the election of Obama supposedly refutes. See Adam Liptak, Supreme Court Takes
Voting  Rights  Case,  N.Y. TIMES, Jan.  10,  2009,  at  A13, available  at
http:llwww.nytimes.com/2009/01ll0/washingtonllOscotus.html?-r=-l&hp.

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