Social Equity, Intellectual History, Black Movement Leaders, and Marcus Garvey

Published date01 April 2024
DOIhttp://doi.org/10.1177/02750740231208033
AuthorKim Moloney,Rupert Lewis
Date01 April 2024
Social Equity, Intellectual History, Black
Movement Leaders, and Marcus Garvey
Kim Moloney
1
and Rupert Lewis
2
Abstract
This paper engages the U.S.-focused social equity literature and its ahistorical understanding of its pre-1968 intellectual his-
tories. We use racial contract theory to highlight the epistemological necessity of a disciplinary reconsideration. We suggest
that intellectual histories bound to an exclusively academic voice negate a fuller understanding of lived realities. By engaging
the work of a Jamaican-born activistlike Marcus Garvey and his signif‌icantinroads into 1910s and 1920s America, we create
an updated historical understanding of social equity that challenges the disciplinary script.
Keywords
social equity, Marcus Garvey, racial contract theory, intellectual history
Introduction
Methodological Whiteness shapes which socio-administrative
knowledge is considered valuable, whose voices are heard,
which history is emphasized, and how questions about
Americas founding social contractare framed (Bhambra,
2017a; Bhambra, 2017b; Howell & Richter-Montpetit, 2019;
Moloney et al., 2022; Moloney et al., 2023). The resulting
epistemological def‌icit is the location for our paperstwo
observations and two disciplinary outputs. The f‌irst observa-
tion is that social equity, as a concept within an American
retelling of public administrations disciplinary history,
began with the 1968 Minnowbrook Conference. We question
this assertionby exposing the Whiteness inherent in suchahis-
torical claims. The second observation relates to the f‌irst.
Public administrations pre-1950s intellectual history in the
United States is largely centered upon White men: Woodrow
Wilson, Leonard White, Frederick Taylor, Luther Gulick,
Dwight Waldo, Paul Appleby, and Herbert Simon, among
others. While there are calls to reconsider social equitys dis-
ciplinary history (e.g., Blessett 2015; Blessett et al., 2016;
Blessett et al., 2019; Blessett & Gaynor, 2021; Emas et al.,
2022; Gaynor and Schachter 2014, Gooden 2015a; Guy &
McCandless, 2012; Moloney & Lewis, 2023; Roberts 2020;
Trochmann & Guy 2022;Wright et al., 2022), more can be
done.
Our f‌irst output is to revisit and to incorporate Black
thought, activism, and experiences into pre- and post-
Reconstructiondisciplinary history. A second output observes
an elephant in the disciplinary room: American understanding
of its disciplinaryhistory islargely written by academics.
While it appears obvious that academics should author disci-
plinary histories, public administration scholars often undersell
how two hundred and f‌iftyyears of chattel slavery and 80-plus
years of Jim Crow inhibited most pre-1950s Black movement
leaders from add ing academicas a job title. The impact seg-
regates early twentieth century Black non-academic activists
from inclusion as an intellectual contributor to what is or is
not our disciplinary history.
We can neither address every angle of this neglect nor the
full arc of history in one article. Instead, we focus on just one
pre-1950s leader: Marcus Garvey (18871940). Just as arti-
cles on disciplinary histories cannot cover all intellectuals,
we also cannot discuss every Black movement leader of
importance in one article. Future scholars may wish to
unpack, expand, contradict, and reconsider our analysis of
Garvey, his understanding of social inequity within the
America of the mid-1910s to 1920s and as importantly,
bring other leaders into updated understandings of social
equitys concept history.
This paper begins by defending its observation of social
equitys early disciplinary Whiteness. We ask the discipline
to reconsider the gatekeeping which limited pre-1950s
Black activists from entering disciplinary conversations.
Throughout the paper, we use racial contract theory as our
entry point. That is, Americasfounding social contract
was a “’contract between whitesas a contract against non-
whiteswhere whites dictate racial oppression overtly, or
subtly, or by accepting the benef‌its of white privilege
1
Public Policy, Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Doha, Qatar
2
Political Thought, University of the West Indies, Kingston, Jamaica
Corresponding Author:
Kim Moloney, Public Policy, Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Doha, Qatar.
Email: kmoloney@hbku.edu.qa
Article
American Review of Public Administration
2024, Vol. 54(3) 215228
© The Author(s) 2023
Article reuse guidelines:
sagepub.com/journals-permissions
DOI: 10.1177/02750740231208033
journals.sagepub.com/home/arp

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