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Living Without Colorblindness: Comparing The Us And Singapore's Approach To Racial Equality, Eunice Chua
Living Without Colorblindness: Comparing The Us And Singapore's Approach To Racial Equality, Eunice Chua
Eunice Chua
The doctrine of color blindness provides, in a nutshell, that any governmental use of racial classifications will be subject to strict scrutiny by the courts, regardless of whether the purpose of such classification was to enforce or to ameliorate racial inequality. Ardent supporters of color blindness believe that it is firmly rooted in the US Constitution and is not only central to the notion racial equality, but essential to upholding human dignity. This paper seeks to examine this claim by placing the spotlight on Singapore, a country where the use of racial categorizations is an accepted legal norm. I argue …