
Racism continues to be a deep moral, social, and structural challenge in modern societies. One useful way to approach it is by distinguishing among active (overt) racism, covert (hidden) racism, and passive racism (inaction or indifference). Understanding these distinctions helps clarify why some forms of racism are more visible and widely condemned while others persist with relative toleranceâand why that tolerance is itself problematic.
Active racismâor overt racismâis characterized by intentional, explicit actions or attitudes meant to discriminate, demean or exclude individuals because of their race. Examples include using a racial slur, refusing service because someone is Black, or endorsing segregationist policies. These are usually socially unacceptable, easily identifiable, and often illegal in many jurisdictions. Researchers describe overt racism as âactions which have as their stated or explicit goal the maintenance of the system of racism and the oppression of those in the targeted racial groups.â Fourmilab+2PMC+2
Covert racism (also referred to as hidden, subtle, or indirect racism) involves actions, policies or attitudes that may appear raceâneutral but have racially disparate effects, or are motivated by bias that is concealed. It is socially less obvious, and thus often harder to challenge. As defined, âcovert racism is a form of racial discrimination that is disguised, hidden or subtleâ and operates through passive or seemingly passive means. EBSCO+2Diversity Social+2 Because it is less visible it can persist without full public scrutiny, yet its impact is real and deep.
Passive racism refers to the failure to act against racist behaviour, structures or systems. It is a form of complicity, often through silence or inaction: choosing not to challenge a racist joke, not questioning a biased hiring decision, or simply accepting the status quo. One definition frames passive racism as âbeliefs, attitudes, and actions that contribute to the maintenance of racism, without openly advocating violence or oppression.â Fourmilab+1
The question arises: if active and covert racism are unacceptable, why is passive racism frequently tolerated, even by those who identify as antiracist? One reason is visibility: active racism is clear, easily condemned, and often subject to legal or social sanction. Covert racism is harder but still involves discernible actions or policies. Passive racism, however, is ambiguousâsilence, omission, or indifferenceâmaking it easier for institutions and individuals to ignore or rationalize.
Furthermore, passive racism is tolerated because many in society carry implicit biases and prefer to see themselves as ânot racistâ rather than actively antiracist. As one critique puts it: âstanding on a moving sidewalk and letting it carry youâ (Tatum, 1997) is passive racism. Learn to be Antiracist+1 The comfort of inaction is compellingâactively opposing racism requires energy, risk, and change; passive support or silence demands little.
Another factor is that systems and institutions are designed in ways that embed racial advantage without explicit racist intent. These systems rely on passive participation. When the majority does not speak out or challenge inequitable practices, they perpetuate structural racism. For example, when whites in hiring, housing, or policing default to âbusiness as usual,â racial disparities persist even in the absence of conscious discriminators.
Let us compare some examples. Active racism: a store clerk telling a Black customer âwe donât serve your kind here.â Covert racism: a company policy that requires extra credentialing primarily disadvantaging Black applicants though the policy is framed as neutral. Passive racism: a colleague witnessing a racially charged remark and failing to object, thereby allowing the culture of bias to continue. These distinctions highlight different levels of culpability and agency.
The harm of passive racism is often underestimated. Because it lacks the overt maliciousness of active racism, it seems less urgentâbut its cumulative effect is substantial. When individuals repeatedly encounter nonâresponses to bias, when institutions consistently fail to act, the message is clear: the status quo remains acceptable. Over time, passive racism sustains the racial hierarchy, undermines trust, and deepens intergenerational harm.
Scholarly literature confirms that covert and passive forms of racism are significant barriers to racial equity. For example, critical reviews show that subtle forms of racismâincluding âinactionâ when witnessing racial biasâcontribute to stress, decreased wellbeing, and reduced trust in institutions among racialised groups. PMC+1 In other words, what is less visible is often just as destructive.
From a theological or moral perspective, one might say that passive racism is unacceptable because it violates core commitments to justice, solidarity and dignity. To remain silent in the face of injustice is morally complicit. As the biblical injunction âlearn to do right; seek justice, correct oppressionâ (IsaiahâŻ1:17) suggests, inaction in the face of wrongdoing is itself a moral failing.
One might ask: if passive racism is so harmful, why do many institutions emphasise only overt racism? Legal frameworks and policies tend to address explicit discrimination, which is easier to document and litigate. Covert and passive racismâbecause of its ambiguity or lack of intentâare more difficult to address through traditional regulation. That regulatory gap contributes to the tolerance of inaction.
In workplaces, passive racism may mean failing to promote or protect Black employees when bias is evident, allowing microâaggressions to accumulate without intervention. Covert racism may appear as patterns of underâhiring or exclusion masked as âpoor fitâ or âculture mismatch.â The former is tolerated, the latter disguisedâbut both enable inequality. CultureAlly+1
In housing, for instance, active racism might include refusing to rent to a Black family. Covert racism might involve setting rental minimums or credit score thresholds that disproportionately exclude Black renters and are justified as neutral. Passive racism might manifest when neighbours or managers see unequal treatment but do nothing. The net effect is generational disadvantage in home ownership, wealth accumulation and neighbourhood quality.
In criminal justice, active racism includes use of racial slurs by police, overt profiling. Covert racism may be policies that lead to higher stopârates in Black neighbourhoods under the guise of âcrime prevention.â Passive racism is the failure of bystanders, community leaders or institutions to challenge disproportionate policing, thus allowing it to continue. Such passivity amplifies racial trauma. Diversity Social+1
It is also worth noting that many people prefer passive racism because it allows them to believe they âarenât racistâ while not actively confronting their privilege, biases or complicity. This selfâcomforting stance sustains racial inequities. Active or covert racism forces a confrontation; passive racism avoids it.
Ethically, passive racism is unacceptable for three main reasons. First, it sustains harm by omissionâsilence is not neutral. Second, it places the burden on victims to continually challenge discrimination rather than holding institutions accountable. Third, it blocks systemic transformation because change requires action, not just lack of hostile intent.
One might argue that passive racism is âless badâ than active harmful racist acts. But the distinction between degrees of harm does not excuse tolerance. When societal structures rely on millions of passive decisionsââI did nothing,â âI did not challenge itââthe result is a continuing system of inequality. The sum of many passive contributions is substantial.
In conclusion, active and covert racism are widely condemned precisely because their violations of dignity and justice are clear and actionable. But passive racism is too often tolerated because it is invisible, indirect, and socially acceptable. Yet the moral imperative remains: to achieve racial justice, one must not only refrain from hostile acts, but actively resist racist systems, challenge covert bias, and refuse the easy path of passivity. Silence or inaction is no longer an option.
References
Amodio, D. M. (2001). The implications of implicit social cognition for judgments and behavior toward others. Personality and Social Psychology Review,âŻ5(1), 3â20.
Baskin, A. (2023). Covert racism. Research Starters â Social Sciences &âŻHumanities. EBSCO. Retrieved from https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/social-sciences-and-humanities/covert-racism EBSCO
CultureAlly. (n.d.). Overt vs. covert racism â Definition &âŻcomparison. Retrieved from https://cultureally.com/blog/overtvscovertracism CultureAlly
Diversity for Social Impact. (2025). OverÂt racism vs covert racism â Understand meanings and implications. Retrieved from https://diversity.social/covert-overt-racism/ Diversity Social
Learn To Be Antiracist. (n.d.). Glossary of terms. Retrieved from https://www.learntobeantiracist.com/glossary Learn to be Antiracist
Orr, A.âŻJ. (2024). Overt/expressed vs covert discrimination. Research Starters â Sociology. EBSCO. EBSCO
Umbrella Collective. (2024, JuneâŻ10). Passive vs active antiâracism: What it is and why it matters. Retrieved from https://www.umbrellacollective.org/blog/2024/6/10/passive-vs-active-anti-racism-what-it-is-and-why-it-matters/ Umbrella Collective