aIt is worth noting that one of the many positive things that this
book has to recommend for itself is a very clear writing style that
makes complex legal and social science concepts accessible to a
wide array of audiences.a
--The Law and Politics Book Review
"It's law-focused and part of an academic series, but its style
and subject matter make it relevant to a broad audience."
--"Pittsburgh Post-Gazette"
"A must read for students of bias, racism, discrimination, and
privilege. Lu-in Wang employs readable prose and compelling
examples to elucidate these complex issues. Her cutting-edge
exposition, especially in the context of health care, offers the
reader a deeper understanding of the unseen forces that govern
daily life."
--Stephanie M. Wildman, professor of law and director, Santa Clara
University School of Law Center for Social Justice
"Does a powerful job of explaining why and how discrimination
still plays such a strong role in our society. Like all of the best
legal scholarship, this insightful book uses an unexpected, fresh
conception to explore an age-old, stubborn problem. The result is a
new understanding of both our legal structure and the society in
which we live. A strong, helpful contribution to the debate on
discrimination, its causes, and the damage it does."--David A.
Harris, E.N. Balk Professor of Law and Values, University of Toledo
College of Law
"(The book is) law-focused and part of an academic series, but
its style and subject matter make it relevant to a broad
audience."
--"Emporia Gazette"
a It very effectively manages to put the somtimes-abstract
principles of social psychology into real world contexts.a
--PsycCRITQUES
Much as we "select" computer settings by default--reflexively,
without thinking, and sometimes without realizing there are other
options--we often discriminate by default as well. And just as
default computer settings tend to become locked in or entrenched as
the standard, discrimination by default creates a situation in
which disparate outcomes are expected, accepted, and taken for
granted. The killing of Amadou Diallo, racial disparities in
medical care, the dominance of Whites and men in certain
professions, and even the uneven media attention paid to crimes
depending on their victims' race and class, all might be cases of
discrimination by, or as, default.
Wang contends that, today, most discrimination occurs by default
and not design, making legal prohibitions that focus on those who
discriminate out of ill will inadequate to redress the largest
share of modern discrimination. She draws on social psychology to
detail three ways in which unconscious assumptions can lead to
discrimination, showing how they play out in a range of everyday
settings. Wang then demonstrates how these dynamics interact in
medical care to produce an invisible, self-fulfilling, and
self-perpetuating prophecy of racial disparity. She goes on to
suggest ways in which institutions and individuals might recognize,
interrupt, and override the discriminatory default.
General
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