Thursday, February 20, 2025 from 4:15-5:30 in Oechsle 224 (Old Oechsle), the A&S Department will host our 2025 Ethnographic Research Colloquium, featuring University of Iowa sociologist Victor Ray on “Critical Race Theory and the Interest Divergence Dilemma”:
In this talk, Dr. Ray draws on two central critical race theory concepts—racial progress narratives and interest convergence—to explain the current backlash to racial inclusion. The democracy-enhancing successes of the Civil Rights Movement were, in part, a response to Cold War imperatives. Political exigencies, including the need to counter effective Soviet propaganda that capitalized on American racial hypocrisy, led elites to favor integration despite the potential domestic political costs. Analyzing this process, Derrick Bell developed his highly influential interest convergence thesis, arguing that racial progress was likely only when white and black interests aligned. Converging interests transformed American organizations as schools, churches, and businesses incorporated formerly excluded people of color. I argue that the rise of autocratic regimes abroad has created a political opportunity structure deepening domestic polarization and threatening to reverse the progress organizations have made towards diversifying. External Cold War era checks on American authoritarianism that were central to the success of the Civil Rights Movement have broken down as autocracies have risen globally. Contemporary levels of polarization signal that we have entered a period of interest divergence, as some Americans—empowered and inspired by international authoritarian movements—have abandoned the project of multi-racial democracy.
Thanks to Prof. Tavares for hosting Dr. Ray!