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Glossary›Critical Race Theory

Glossary

Critical Race Theory

An academic framework examining how race and racism are embedded in legal systems and social structures, rather than solely in individual prejudice.

What is Critical Race Theory?

Critical Race Theory (CRT) is an analytical framework developed in the 1970s and 1980s by legal scholars examining how race and racism operate within American legal systems, policies, and institutions. Rather than viewing racism primarily as individual prejudice or isolated acts of discrimination, CRT posits that racism is embedded in the structures, practices, and discourses of legal and social institutions. The framework emerged from critical legal studies and radical feminism, applying insights about power and subordination specifically to the intersection of race, law, and power.

CRT scholars argue that race is a social construct—not a biological reality—yet one with profound material consequences. The framework analyzes how legal doctrines, ostensibly neutral, have maintained racial hierarchies and how civil rights advances have often been permitted only when they converge with the interests of white elites (a concept called “interest convergence”). CRT emphasizes centering the lived experiences and narratives of people of color, particularly through counter-storytelling that challenges dominant narratives about race and meritocracy.

Origins & Lineage

Critical Race Theory emerged in the late 1970s when legal scholars including Derrick Bell, Alan Freeman, and Richard Delgado began questioning why civil rights legislation of the 1960s had failed to produce lasting racial equality. Bell, often considered the intellectual father of CRT, left Harvard Law School in 1980 after teaching there became the first tenured Black professor at a major law school. His 1980 Harvard Law Review article “Brown v. Board of Education and the Interest-Convergence Dilemma” argued that landmark civil rights victories occurred only when they aligned with white self-interest.

The formal naming of the movement occurred in 1989 at a workshop organized by Kimberlé Crenshaw in Madison, Wisconsin, where scholars including Bell, Crenshaw, Mari Matsuda, Charles Lawrence III, and Patricia Williams gathered to articulate a coherent intellectual approach. Crenshaw coined the term “Critical Race Theory” to describe this emerging body of scholarship. Key founding texts include Bell’s “Race, Racism and American Law” (1973, though predating the formal movement), Crenshaw’s “Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex” (1989, which introduced intersectionality), and the anthology “Critical Race Theory: The Key Writings That Formed the Movement” edited by Crenshaw, Neil Gotanda, Gary Peller, and Kendall Thomas (1995).

How It’s Practiced

CRT functions primarily as an analytical lens applied in legal scholarship, education theory, sociology, and policy analysis. Scholars use CRT to examine how seemingly race-neutral laws—from property law to school funding formulas—create or perpetuate racial disparities. In education, scholars like Gloria Ladson-Billings have applied CRT to examine curriculum, discipline policies, and achievement gaps.

The framework employs several distinctive methodological approaches: counter-storytelling (using narrative and first-person accounts to challenge dominant legal narratives), interest convergence analysis (examining when and why racial progress occurs), and whiteness as property (analyzing how legal structures have protected white advantage as a property interest). Practitioners conduct historical analysis, legal case review, and qualitative research that centers marginalized voices.

In institutional settings, CRT informs diversity training, policy reviews, and curriculum development, though these applications have become contested in recent years. The framework encourages practitioners to ask: Who benefits from current arrangements? Whose stories are privileged? What race-neutral language masks racial impact?

Critical Race Theory Today

Since 2020, Critical Race Theory has become intensely contested in American public discourse, though often the term is used to describe any discussion of racism or diversity training rather than the specific academic framework. As of 2021-2023, numerous U.S. states passed legislation restricting how race, racism, and American history can be taught in public schools, often referencing CRT despite these curricula rarely engaging with the actual legal scholarship.

In academic settings, CRT continues as a specialized analytical framework primarily in law schools, education departments, and ethnic studies programs. Scholars like Devon Carbado, Cheryl Harris, and Ian Haney López continue developing the framework, applying it to areas including immigration law, criminal justice, and environmental racism. The field has expanded to include LatCrit (Latin American critical theory), AsianCrit, TribalCrit, and other race-specific frameworks.

Seekers interested in understanding structural racism and institutional analysis encounter CRT through university courses, academic publications, and books written for general audiences by CRT-adjacent scholars. The framework has influenced activist movements, including demands for police reform and reparations, though CRT itself is an analytical tool rather than a political program.

Common Misconceptions

Critical Race Theory is not a K-12 curriculum. The framework is a graduate-level analytical approach taught primarily in law schools and academic settings. Many recent controversies conflate general discussions of racism, diversity training, or inclusive history curricula with CRT.

CRT does not teach that all white people are inherently racist or that individuals should feel guilt about their race. Rather, it analyzes systems and structures, examining how institutions can produce racially disparate outcomes regardless of individual intent.

CRT is not synonymous with all anti-racism work, diversity training, or progressive politics on race. It is a specific analytical framework with distinct methodological commitments, intellectual genealogy, and scholarly community. Not all discussions of systemic racism employ CRT, and many anti-racism educators work from entirely different frameworks.

The framework does not reject the possibility of progress or paint an entirely deterministic picture of racial hierarchy. CRT scholars have been activists and reformers while maintaining analytical clarity about structural obstacles.

How to Begin

For those seeking to understand Critical Race Theory as an analytical framework, begin with “Critical Race Theory: An Introduction” (3rd edition, 2017) by Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic, which provides accessible overview of key concepts, major scholars, and the movement’s history.

Kimberlé Crenshaw’s original articles—“Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex” (1989) and “Mapping the Margins” (1991)—introduce intersectionality and demonstrate CRT methodology through concrete legal analysis. Derrick Bell’s “Faces at the Bottom of the Well” (1992) uses allegorical storytelling to illustrate CRT concepts for general readers.

For those interested in how CRT applies beyond law, Gloria Ladson-Billings’s “Just What Is Critical Race Theory and What’s It Doing in a Nice Field Like Education?” (1998) examines educational applications. Cheryl Harris’s “Whiteness as Property” (1993, Harvard Law Review) is considered one of the most important CRT articles.

Online, the African American Policy Forum, co-founded by Kimberlé Crenshaw, offers accessible resources. University law reviews and education journals publish ongoing CRT scholarship, available through academic databases.

Related terms

intersectionalitysystemic oppressionsocial justicedecolonizationliberation theologyracial equity
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