What I Am Thinking About Now: Daniel Hirschman, "Standardizing Biases: Selection Devices and the Quantification of Race"

CSREA Conference Room, Lippitt House, Room 101

Please join us on Wednesday, October 19, 12-1pm for a "What I Am Thinking About Now" presentation from Daniel Hirschman, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Brown University. His talk is titled, "Standardizing Biases: Selection Devices and the Quantification of Race."

Racial inequality persists despite major advances in formal, legal racial equality. Scholars and policymakers argue that implicit bias and other forms of "new prejudice" combined with subjective organizational decision-making practices perpetuate racial inequality. The standardization of decision-making offers a potential solution, promising to eliminate the subjectivity that allows implicit bias to creep into consequential decisions. Drawing on research in science studies and law and society, we argue that standardization must be understood as a heterogeneous practice capable of producing very different outcomes depending on the manner in which it is accomplished and the organizational infrastructure surrounding its use. We compare "selection devices" – simple quantified tools for making allocation decisions – in three distinct contexts (undergraduate admissions, consumer credit, and child welfare) to highlight the complex relationships between race and standardization. In particular, we suggest that actuarial standardization practices, including those adopted with the intention of reducing racial inequality, tend to reinforce an unequal status quo by reconfiguring mutable social structures into immutable individual risk factors.

This talk is based on a collaboration with Emily Bosk, Assistant Professor of Social Work at Rutgers.

"What I Am Thinking About Now" is an on-going informal workshop/seminar series to which faculty and graduate students are invited to present and discuss recently published work and work in progress. All are invited to attend and participate.