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What are Microaggressions?
Research & Learn
鈥淢icroaggressions鈥 are against another based on a person鈥檚 status in a minority or marginalized group, including slights made unconsciously or unintentionally. A widely circulated of examples of 鈥淢icroaggressions in Every Day Life鈥 includes saying 鈥淎merica is a melting pot鈥 to a person of color, or helping a disabled person board a bus or train despite their ability to do so unassisted.
In recent years, college students across the country have asked that their institutions create systems for reporting microaggressions. Faculty similar requests. As FIREand other free speech advocates have pointed out, however, such systems threaten to chill constitutionally protected expression: Microaggressions that consist only of speech or expression are protected by the First Amendment unless they also fall into one of the few and narrowly defined categories of unprotected speech, like true threats or incitement to imminent lawless action.
Are microaggressions free speech?
The inherent subjectivity and elasticity of the concept of microaggressions make a clear, objective definition all but impossible in practice. And without a shared understanding of what speech or action may constitute a microaggression, students and faculty run the risk of being reported for speech protected by the First Amendment that nevertheless crosses an invisible line, drawn by and known only to the offended party.
What鈥檚 more, policing microaggressions and free speech threatens to shut down the sort of conversations from which college students might learn the most. One person鈥檚 microaggression is another鈥檚 earnest attempt to discuss different life experiences.
To that end, Derald Wing Sue and Christina M. Capodilupo, professors at Teachers College, Columbia University who have written extensively about microaggressions and authored the popular of examples found on campuses nationwide, have warned about their concern that 鈥減eople who use these examples would take them out of context and use them as a punitive rather than an exemplary way.鈥
As Professor Sue told The Chronicle of Higher Education, 鈥淧eople who engage in microaggressions are oftentimes well-intentioned, decent individuals who aren鈥檛 aware that they are engaging in an offensive way toward someone else.鈥 Accordingly, Professor Capodilupo noted that the intent was to promote understanding, not silence conversations:
Now that the research has made its way into popular culture, Ms. Capodilupo said, some people use the word to shut down conversations instead of reflecting on the situation.
鈥淚t was never meant to give a vernacular that then makes it OK to stop talking,鈥 Ms. Capodilupo said. 鈥淚t was to ask people to be flexible in their thinking and to be open-minded to the concept that we don鈥檛 all walk through the world in the same shoes.鈥
Nevertheless, calls continue for the prohibition or reporting of microaggressions, most often as a way to promote an inclusive campus. A 2013 report issued by UCLA, for example, characterized the resulting chill on speech as a desirable outcome of investigating alleged microaggressions. But inclusivity cannot be achieved by censorship. Whether the perceived verbal insult is 鈥渕acro鈥 or 鈥渕icro,鈥 the only effective answer to insulting or offensive speech is more speech.