“…A number of works in 2020 similarly echo the importance of not only focusing on racism but on naming whiteness beyond its iteration in white nationalist extremism and analyzing "how white supremacy is structured in and through our institutions, our disciplinary theories and methods, our everyday relations, and global economic and political processes"(Beliso-De Jesús and Pierre 2020, 67). We observe this in the re-centering of whiteness in diversity campaigns (Shankar 2020), the reproduction of whiteness in the ostensibly neutral science of nutrition (Valdez 2020), how whiteness structures the lexicon of development and its practices in the Global South (Pierre 2020b), the moral anxieties and strivings of white women in the face of racialized police killings (Kwon 2020), white sexual politics (S. Bjork-James 2020), whiteness as the invisible apparatus undergirding the imperial history of scientific interpretations of faces (Mak 2020), and the cosmology of white supremacy and its relationship to anthropology (Rana 2020). The category of "white" comes to the fore as a moral-ethic made from and through this presumption of innocent subjecthood, a status that is coded as just, sustainable, benevolent, scientific, and ultimately sacrosanct and made material through the law, the family, religion, resource management, epigenetics, and anthropology.…”