Calculating race: Racial discrimination in risk assessment

Benjamin Wiggins

Research output: Book/ReportBook

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Calculating Race: Racial Discrimination in Risk Assessment presents the historical relationship between statistical risk assessment and race in the United States. It illustrates how, through a reliance on the variable of race, actuarial science transformed the nature of racism and, in turn, helped usher racial disparities in wealth, incarceration, and housing from the nineteenth century into the twentieth. The monograph begins by investigating the development of statistical risk assessment explicitly based on race in the late-nineteenth-century life insurance industry. It then traces how such risk assessment migrated from industry to government, becoming a guiding force in parole decisions and in federal housing policy. Finally, it concludes with an analysis of "proxies" for race-statistical variables that correlate significantly with race-in order to demonstrate the persistent presence of race in risk assessment even after the anti-discrimination regulations won by the Civil Rights Movement. Offering readers a new perspective on the historical importance of actuarial science in structural racism, Calculating Race is a particularly timely contribution as Big Data and algorithmic decision-making increasingly pervade American life.

Original languageEnglish (US)
PublisherOxford University Press
Number of pages140
ISBN (Electronic)9780197504000
ISBN (Print)9780197504024
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2020

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Oxford University Press 2020. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • Actuarial science
  • Algorithms
  • American history
  • Housing policy
  • Incarceration
  • Insurance
  • Race
  • Racism
  • Risk assessment
  • United States

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