Law in Contemporary Society

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Introduction

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Professional sports are often offered as an example of racial equality in America. Young black men earn great fame and fortune and are adopted as “heroes”, all of which is used as evidence of a lack of racism. In reality, sport is a mechanism that reinforces and maintains white supremacy.
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Professional sport is often offered as an example of racial equality in America. Young black men earn great fame and fortune and are adopted as “heroes”, all of which is used as evidence of a lack of racism. In reality, sport is a mechanism that reinforces and maintains white supremacy.
 

Where is the Social Progress?

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To characterize the prominence of African Americans among star athletes as evidence of an egalitarian society as is to greatly misinterpret the evidence; it is a result of highly limited opportunities for upward mobility in a racialized, capitalist society.
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To characterize the prominence of African Americans among star athletes as evidence of an egalitarian society is to greatly misinterpret the evidence; it is a result of highly limited opportunities for upward mobility in a racialized, capitalist society.
 A lack of opportunity in other facets of life results in a great number of black youths dedicating their lives to success in sports. A small number of athletes achieve financial success, but a great percentage of those who pursue sports careers fail.
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The claim is not that the sports industry is a conspiracy formed with the hopes of creating a cycle of failure predicated on pipe-dreams about sports careers within poor black communities, but rather to demonstrate that the economic effects that result from the cycle are bad for communities.
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The claim is not that the sports industry is a conspiracy formed with the hopes of creating a cycle of failure predicated on pipe-dreams about sports careers within poor black communities; rather, the point is that the economic effects that result from the cycle are bad for the communities.
 

Where are the Black Coaches and Owners?

The utility of sports as a means for social advancement is stunted by institutional racism. Discrepancies between the percentage of black athletes in a sport and the percentage of black coaches and executives appear in every major American sports organization. The most egregious example may well be college football, where 5% of coaches are black, compared to 45% of players. http://www.bus.ucf.edu/sport/public/downloads/2006-07_CollegeSportRGRC_PR.pdf .

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