While they don’t all name critical race theory - which in and of itself is not being taught in many, if any, K-12 schools - the new state bills rest on the same foundation: the desire to broadly stop teaching and training on “divisive concepts.” Christina Animashaun/Vox His exit from office didn’t put an end to the assault on critical race theory, though - it only amplified it.īy January, GOP lawmakers began quietly drafting and introducing bills that mirrored one another in an effort to stop schools from teaching about racism or any topics that confront America’s history of racial and gender oppression. Though the school of thought had been relatively obscure outside of academia, a conservative campaign was launched against it, and by September, then-President Donald Trump had signed an executive order restricting implicit bias and diversity trainings by government agencies. It all began as racial justice protests took off across the country in the summer of 2020 and a Fox News story fashioned critical race theory as a boogeyman. Over the past six months, Republicans in more than two dozen states have proposed bills that aim to stymie educational discussions about race, racism, and systemic oppression in the US - potentially eliminating the conversations altogether. It is just now receiving widespread attention because it has morphed into a catchall category, one used by Republicans who want to ban anti-racist teachings and trainings in classrooms and workplaces across the country. Watching the news or browsing social media, it would be easy to think that critical race theory is a complicated, controversial, or new idea.īut critical race theory, created four decades ago by legal scholars, is an academic framework for examining how racism is embedded in America’s laws and institutions.