‘A Matter of National Responsibility’.
The topic of reparations in the United States dates as far back as the Reconstruction Era, but it has gained particular momentum in today’s national conversation, as Congress and 2020 presidential candidates discuss how to make formal amends for America’s history of racial inequality.
The controversial idea is based on the argument that the effects of slavery have spurred inequities for generations of black Americans—through the Jim Crow era and to the present day in areas such as housing, education, employment, and criminal justice—and that the descendants of slaves deserve some form of compensation, including financial payments. The US House of Representatives is currently considering the Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act (H.R. 40), which would establish a committee to address what these reparations would be, and how they would be distributed. The late US Representative John Conyers first introduced the bill in 1989, and each year until he retired in 2017, but it failed each time. US Representative Sheila Jackson Lee sponsored the most recent version.
On Wednesday, November 6, the School of Public Health will host the Diversity & Inclusion Seminar “Black Reparations: The ARC of Justice” featuring William Darity, Samuel DuBois Cook Professor of Public Policy and director of the Samuel DuBois Cook Center on Social Equity at Duke University.
Darity is a leading voice on reparations and testified at a House Judiciary subcommittee hearing on H.R. 40 in June. “For too long the nation has refused to take steps to solve an unethical predicament of its own making—the problem of the unequal status of black and white Americans,” he said in his testimony. “A policy of reparations is a set of compensatory policies for grievous injustice.”
SPH is the perfect space to take on this argument, says Yvette Cozier, assistant dean for diversity and inclusion and associate professor of epidemiology, who helped plan the event.
“In public health, we do the hard things,” she says. “We have to have a conversation about reparations and not be afraid of where it takes us.”
Cozier noted that the subject is particularly salient to the health and medical science fields, where black people have a long history of serving as subjects of clinical studies, often unwillingly or unknowingly, and with little or no compensation. In dealing with the impact of slavery and injustice, she says, “we have to use an equity lens, especially in public health work, because it informs so much of what we do.”
Ahead of the seminar, Darity discussed the main objectives of reparations and how this monetary compensation would impact the racial wealth gap in the US.
Why do you think the topic of reparations has become part of the national political conversation in recent years?
The conversation about reparations is probably the most extensive one we’ve had at the national level since the Reconstruction Era. I’m not entirely sure why it’s happening now, it was a surprise to me. I didn’t anticipate that we would have major political candidates voicing the term “reparations,” whether or not they’re actually endorsing it.
Can you explain what reparations should achieve?
The reparations program should fill three objectives: Acknowledgment, Redress, and Closure. Acknowledgement refers to the combination of an apology and the recognition on the part of the culpable party that they’ve benefitted from this process of exploitation. Redress is the actual form that restitution might take—and I’ve argued that in any program of reparations, it’s important that restitution must include in some significant way direct payments to eligible recipients. The third dimension is Closure, which is an agreement on the part of both parties—the culpable party and the victimized party—that the debt has been paid. But I want to be clear that closure in that sense does not mean forgetting. An important dimension of reparations programs must address issues concerning the memory of the events that led to the reparations commitment.
You’ve argued that black Americans should possess at least the same percentage of the nation’s wealth as its national population (13 to 14 percent, as opposed to less than 3 percent). What is the most appropriate frame to view and address the wide racial wealth gap that exists today?
There’s a large portion of the American population, including some black Americans, who take the position that the types of disparities that we observe, inclusive of health disparities, are attributable to dysfunctional behavior on the part of blacks. There are lots of individual, behavioral-based explanations for why there might be higher levels of diabetes or hypertension in the black community, and my position is that that’s an inaccurate reading of the situation. Virtually all of these disparities are a consequence of structural considerations, inclusive of adverse intergenerational transmission effects that are associated with the allocation of resources across generations. Black parents and grandparents have less to give the youngest generation because of the historic deprivation of wealth, which manifests itself in a host of disparities that we observe in the present moment.
Is there any aspect of the conversation around reparations that should be receiving more attention?
It’s really important that a strong focus be given to the question of what are the beliefs that inform the people reasoning about why we have enormous racial disparities. We have to continue to hammer away at the view that it’s a consequence of bad behavior on the part of black Americans, rather than the structural conditions that confront them.
The topic of reparations evokes many emotional responses from supporters and opponents—including guilt. What would you say to people who are grappling with feelings of guilt over America’s history of racial injustice?
I certainly think there are people who are inclined to feel like personal guilt is at play here. But since the culpable party is the federal government, it’s not a matter of guilt or individual responsibility, but it is a matter of national responsibility.
Do you think that the House bill has a better chance of passing this time?
The bill languished in committee for so long, without any hearings—so the fact that we did have hearings on it in June means that the situation may be more optimistic now for its passage.
But I want to emphasize that the bill is not satisfactory in its current form, and it does need to be revised to be most effective. One of the issues is that the culpable party for reparations is the United States government, and the government didn’t come into existence until 1776. So the H.R. 40 bill needs to indicate that the starting point for the assessment of the atrocities that occurred has to be 1776, not 1619, which is identified as the year in which the first enslaved Africans were brought to the United States for sale—because it wasn’t the United States in 1619. That modification to the bill is essential, given who the culpable party is.