St. John's Law Review

Corporate Hierarchy and Racial Justice

By: Thomas W. Joo

Although previously ignored in assessing the interplay between corporate governance and racial disparities in the workplace, the role of corporate structures, business practices, and the corporate law regime is integral to that very analysis. The implications of workplace interactions play a crucial role in determining perceptions of interracial activity, as well as allocating the distribution of power, wealth and prestige among racial groups. Although corporate regulation has enjoyed recent political popularity following Enron, current hostilities toward race-conscious remedial law fails to provide a legitimate basis for improvement in the near future. 

Two conflicting theories are presented by the author for initiating corporate change: shareholder participation and management discretion. The first, referred to by the author as democratic aspirationalism, seeks to influence corporate behavior through the mechanisms of corporate democracy, that is, through shareholders’ legal avenues of participation in corporate governance. The Second, referred to as hierarchical realism, seeks corporate change with the understanding that notwithstanding the rhetoric of corporate democracy, the board of directors and the top executive officers, not shareholders, wield the real power in a corporation.

Shareholder empowerment holds little potential for achieving racial justice in corporate conduct. Additionally, Government intervention is an unlikely solution, particularly given the ideological tendencies of our current federal government. Surprisingly, the existing system, which concentrates power and discretion in the board of directors and executive officers, holds greater potential than shareholder majoritarianism or government regulation. This is not to say that corporate hierarchs have a more developed sense of moral responsibility than ordinary shareholders do. Nor does it mean that the existing corporate governance system is an ideal technique used to make corporations responsive to racial issues. In reality, dependence on management discretion is probably the worst possible method—except for all the others.