Calculating Race
Racial Discrimination in Risk Assessment
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Narrated by:
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Eric Jason Martin
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By:
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Benjamin Wiggins
About this listen
In Calculating Race, Benjamin Wiggins analyzes the historical relationship between statistical risk assessment and race in the United States. He illustrates how actuarial science transformed the nature of racism and helped usher racial disparities in wealth, incarceration, and housing from the 19th century into the 20th.
Wiggins begins by tracing how the life insurance industry utilized race in its calculations at the end of the 19th century, focusing particularly on Prudential and its aggressive battles with state regulators to discriminate against clients and adjust rates on the basis of race. He then turns his focus to the collection of racial statistics in the Illinois state penitentiary system in the late 19th century and the state's subsequent development of predictive sentencing and parole formulas in the 1920s that weighed race as a key factor.
Next, he investigates the role of race in the state-sponsored mortgage insurance program of the Federal Housing Administration between the start of the New Deal and the beginning of the Cold War and its prolonged effects on mortgage lending. Wiggins concludes with an analysis of the use of race in the statistical risk assessments across financial institutions and government programs during the post-civil rights movement era.
©2020 Oxford University Press (P)2020 HighBridge, a division of Recorded Books