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Article
On Account of Race or Color: Race as Corporation and the Original Understanding of Race
Albany Law Review
  • Reginald Oh, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, Cleveland State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2009
Keywords
  • racism,
  • equal protection doctrine
Abstract

Oh describes this essay as a critique of constitutional and political discourse on "race" and argues that current equal protection doctrine operates under a conception of race that undermines rather than moves forward the goal of achieving racial equality. That understanding defines race solely or primarily as a physical trait or characteristic, and unjustifiably rejects other, more robust notions of race. He argues that the notion of race as physical trait is inconsistent with the historical understanding of race that served as the basis for the Reconstruction Amendments. A careful examination of nineteenth and early twentieth century court decisions, decisions which include Plessy v. Ferguson and Strauder v. West Virginia, suggests that the framers of the Reconstruction Amendments and the Supreme Court Justices of that era thought of race, not as a physical trait, but as an entity with a corporate existence. In other words, they thought of race as corporation.

Citation Information
Reginald Oh. "On Account of Race or Color: Race as Corporation and the Original Understanding of Race" Albany Law Review Vol. 72 Iss. 4 (2009) p. 1027 - 1040
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/reginald-oh/16/