The Racial Contract
First edition | |
| Author | Charles W. Mills |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Subject | Political philosophy |
| Publisher | Cornell University Press |
Publication date | 1997 |
| Publication place | United States |
| Media type | Hardcover |
| Pages | 171 |
| ISBN | 978-0-8014-8463-6 |
The Racial Contract is a book by the Jamaican philosopher Charles W. Mills in which he argues that, although it is conventional to represent the social contract moral and political theories of Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Immanuel Kant as neutral with respect to race and ethnicity, these social contracts only regulated relations between whites. The book demonstrates the ways in which social contract theorists helped to create a "racial contract," which formally and informally permits whites to oppress and exploit people of color and validate their own moral ideals in dealing with non-whites. Because in contemporary political philosophy, white philosophers take their own white privilege for granted, they don't recognize that white supremacy is a political system, and so in their developments of ideal, moral and political theory never consider actual practice. Mills proposes to develop a non-ideal theory "to explain and expose the inequities of the actual nonideal policy and to help us see through the theories and moral justifications offered in defense of them." Using it as a central concept, "the notion of a Racial Contract might be more revealing of the real character of the world we are living in, and the corresponding historical deficiencies of its normative theories and practices, than the raceless notions currently dominant in political theory."
The Racial Contract has sold over 50,000 copies and been adopted in hundreds of courses in the United States in philosophy as well as "political science, sociology, anthropology, literature, education, African American, American Studies, and other subjects." The book has been translated into Korean, Turkish, and French.
In 2022, Cornell University Press issued a 25th-anniversary edition with a new introduction by Mills and a foreword by Tommie Shelby, Caldwell Titcomb Professor of African and African American Studies and of Philosophy at Harvard University.
The book won a Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award for the study of bigotry and human rights in America.
The American Political Science Association chose Mills as the recipient of its biennial Benjamin E. Lippincott Award, which "honors exceptional work by a living political theorist that is still considered significant after a time span of at least 15 years since the original publication."