Recent advances in scientific research have included a renewed interest
in biological concepts of race and explanations of racial inequality.
The science that emerged from sequencing the human genome has been
marked by investigations of race-based genetic difference and the
redefinition of race as a genomic category. The genomic era has
generated collaborations between biological and social scientists that
seek to link social outcomes to genetic traits. Even some researchers
who study the impact of social inequality on biological outcomes have
explained racial disadvantage in biological terms. And the biological
and social scientists developing a new racial science avoid the
political implications of their research by distinguishing their
objectivity and socially beneficial aims from scientific racism of the
past. This lecture will critically examine the new racial science and
propose a more just way for social and biological scientists to study
race and racism.