Evanston Is an Equity Project, Not Reparations

A $25,000 housing grant is a good step but doesn’t right the wrong of slavery and economic injustice

iWriteTee
Momentum

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Photo: Todd Kent/Unsplash

Evanston, Illinois, approved to use a small portion of its cannabis taxes for an equity initiative to address housing inequities from redlining. The city calls it reparations. While this is a good step in the right direction and a great model to study, this isn’t reparations.

According to a Black Star News op-ed by A. Kirsten Mullen and William Darity:

This is a housing plan dressed up as a reparations plan….The term reparations [should] be reserved for a comprehensive policy of redress for black American descendants of persons enslaved in the United States. Specifically, black reparations must refer to a project that eliminates the nation’s staggering racial wealth gap. Indeed, true reparations must incorporate four essential elements.

Mullen and Darity are the authors of From Here to Equality: Reparations for Black Americans in the Twenty-First Century, and they explain — in their book and in the op-ed — the four elements that are required for effective reparation:

  1. Identifying African Americans born in the United States and descendants of Africans who were brought here and were enslaved.

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iWriteTee
Momentum

Top Writer, freelancer, matriarch, educator & development consultant with bylines in Creators Hub, Better Marketing, Zora, Momentum, An Injustice!, etc.