“Reparations for Slavery: History and Current Debate” Ana Lucia Araujo, Howard University October 10, 2019

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

“Reparations for Slavery: History and Current Debate” Ana Lucia Araujo, Howard University October 10, 2019 Reparations in Context “Reparations for Slavery: History and Current Debate” Ana Lucia Araujo, Howard University October 10, 2019 The Luskin Center for History and Policy kicked off its 2019-2020 “Reparations in Context” series with a lecture delivered by Ana Lucia Araujo, Professor of History at Howard University on October 10, 2019. The lecture was co-sponsored by the UCLA African Studies Center, the UCLA Latin American Institute, the UCLA Promise Institute for Human Rights, and the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA. Professor Araujo’s talk was entitled “Reparations for Slavery: History and Current Debate.” Professor Araujo is a social and cultural historian who specializes in history and public memory of the Atlantic slave trade. In 2017 she published Reparations for Slavery and the Slave Trade: A Transnational and Comparative History. Professor Araujo began her lecture with the observation that the demands for reparations for slavery emerged long before to the 20th and 21st centuries. Many governments, including the United States government, have – eventually – responded favorably to pressure urging them to offer symbolic reparation, in the form of museums, monuments, and commemorations. However, to date no governments in the Americas, in Europe, or in Africa have paid material or financial reparations to former slaves or their descendants. In the first segment of her lecture, Professor Araujo presented evidence that demonstrates the long history of demands for symbolic, financial, and material reparations of different kinds. Already by the 18th century, argued Araujo, slaves and former slaves had conceptualized the idea of financial reparations. In one case, former slave Belinda Sutton successfully petitioned the Massachusetts General Court for financial restitution from her former enslaver in the late 18th century. By the 20th century, the question of reparations began to appear in debates about human rights and international law. Nevertheless, from the 18th to the early 20th century, across the globe the issue of reparations was superseded by the demand of former slave owners that they receive financial compensation after abolition. The major change in the debate came at the end of the Second World War. Jewish survivors of the Holocaust and victim’s families were awarded reparations, which inspired renewed calls for financial and material reparations for slavery worldwide. These demands grew stronger in the 1960s. By the beginning of the new millennium, initiatives like CARICOM Reparations Commission Ten Point Action Plan proposed options for implementing reparations, though, Professor Araujo pointed out, even this plan focused largely on symbolic rather than financial reparations. Since the earliest calls for reparations, demands and debates in different countries have been shaped by the way that individual slave societies were originally organized, how early demands for citizenship occurred, and by contemporary conditions. Despite broad differences in the way that these debates have evolved, one fact remains the same across Europe, the Americas, and Africa: no country has yet paid financial or material reparations to formers slaves or their descendants. Questions about who ought to receive reparations, who should pay reparations, and how these reparations might be administered are complex and unresolved. Professor Araujo is adamant that the case in favor of reparations has been made, for centuries and in many different contexts. Whether these demands will be answered is a question for policymakers, activists, and societies worldwide. .
Recommended publications
  • Righting the Wrongs of Slavery, 89 Geo. LJ 2531
    UIC School of Law UIC Law Open Access Repository UIC Law Open Access Faculty Scholarship 1-1-2001 Forgive U.S. Our Debts? Righting the Wrongs of Slavery, 89 Geo. L.J. 2531 (2001) Kevin Hopkins John Marshall Law School Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.uic.edu/facpubs Part of the Law and Race Commons, and the Legal History Commons Recommended Citation Kevin Hopkins, Forgive U.S. Our Debts? Righting the Wrongs of Slavery, 89 Geo. L.J. 2531 (2001). https://repository.law.uic.edu/facpubs/153 This Book Review is brought to you for free and open access by UIC Law Open Access Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in UIC Law Open Access Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of UIC Law Open Access Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. REVIEW ESSAY Forgive U.S. Our Debts? Righting the Wrongs of Slavery KEvIN HOPKINS* "We must make sure that their deaths have posthumous meaning. We must make sure that from now until the end of days all humankind stares this evil in the face.., and only then can we be sure it will never arise again." President Ronald Reagan' INTRODUCTION: Tm BIG PAYBACK In recent months, claims for reparations for slavery have gained new popular- ity amongst black intellectuals and trial lawyers and have been given additional momentum by the publication of Randall Robinson's controversial and thought- provoking book, The Debt: What America Owes to Blacks.2 In The Debt, Robinson makes a serious and persuasive case for the payment of reparations by the United States government to African-Americans for both the injustices done to their ancestors during slavery and the effect of those wrongs on the current * Associate Professor of Law, The John Marshall Law School.
    [Show full text]
  • Jim Crow Racism and the Mexican Americans of San Antonio, Texas
    ORAL HISTORY AS A MEANS OF MORAL REPAIR: JIM CROW RACISM AND THE MEXICAN AMERICANS OF SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS by Rebecca Dominguez-Karimi A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of The Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Florida Atlantic University Boca Raton, FL May 2018 Copyright by Rebecca Dominguez-Karimi, 2017 ii ORAL HISTORY AS A MEANS OF MORAL REPAIR: JIM CROW RACISM AND THE MEXICAN AMERICANS OF SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS by Rebecca Dominguez-Karimi This dissertation was prepared under the direction of the candidate's dissertation advisor, Dr. Sandra Norman, Comparative Studies Program, and has been approved by the members of her supervisory committee. It was submitted to the faculty of the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters and was accepted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. SUPERVISORY COMMnTEE: ~~o..... .:i N1~"" Sandra Norman, Ph.D. ~~Susan Love Brown, Ph. 'S:"..,;ae~.~~o~ JosephinBeoku-Betts, Ph.D. Directo , mparative St ilies Pro? MiC11aeliOfSWclD.~-# Dean, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts andn:ers . 5"", "Zo/g "~~2.~~ ' iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The author offers her sincerest thanks and gratitude to members of her committee (past and present-Dr. Robin Fiore, Dr. Marta Cruz-Janzen, Dr. Sandra Norman, Dr. Susan Love Brown, and Dr. Josephine Beoku-Betts) for their guidance, input, and support in bringing this manuscript to fruition. She wishes to especially thank her dissertation advisor, Dr. Sandra Norman, for her patience, advice, and inspiration during the composition of this manuscript.
    [Show full text]
  • A/74/321 General Assembly
    United Nations A/74/321 General Assembly Distr.: General 21 August 2019 Original: English Seventy-fourth session Item 70 (b) of the provisional agenda* Elimination of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance: comprehensive implementation of and follow-up to the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action Contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and racial intolerance Note by the Secretary-General** The Secretariat has the honour to transmit to the General Assembly the report of the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, Tendayi Achiume, prepared pursuant to Gener al Assembly resolution 73/262. * A/74/150. ** The present report was submitted after the deadline owing to the proximity of the deadline to earlier deadlines for the submission of the reports of the Special Rapporteur to the Human Rights Council, as well as the greater number of reports that the Special Rapporteur is required to submit relative to other special procedures mandate holders. 19-14222 (E) 290819 *1914222* A/74/321 Report of the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and racial intolerance Summary In the present report, the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and racial intolerance addresses the human rights obligations of Member States in relation to reparations for racial discrimination rooted in slavery and colonialism. 2/23 19-14222 A/74/321 I. Activities of the Special Rapporteur 1. The present report is submitted pursuant to General Assembly resolution 73/262 on a global call for concrete action for the total elimination of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and the comprehensive implementation of and follow-up to the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action.
    [Show full text]
  • American Slavery and Labour Market Power
    Economic History of Developing Regions ISSN: 2078-0389 (Print) 2078-0397 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rehd20 American slavery and labour market power Suresh Naidu To cite this article: Suresh Naidu (2020) American slavery and labour market power, Economic History of Developing Regions, 35:1, 3-22, DOI: 10.1080/20780389.2020.1734312 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/20780389.2020.1734312 Published online: 16 Apr 2020. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 3 View related articles View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=rehd20 ECONOMIC HISTORY OF DEVELOPING REGIONS 2020, VOL. 35, NO. 1, 3–22 https://doi.org/10.1080/20780389.2020.1734312 LEAP LECTURE American slavery and labour market power Suresh Naidua,b aColumbia University, New York, USA; bNational Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, USA ABSTRACT In this article I discuss the micro-economics of American slavery in light of recent research on monopsonistic labour markets. I argue that the defining characteristic of coerced labour, the threat of violence to prevent voluntary quits from a job, can be helpfully understood by contrasting it with free labour markets that are riven with imperfect competition and agency problems. American slavery looks closer to the textbook competitive model of labour markets than does free labour. 1. Introduction The second chapter of ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ provides an illuminating view of the labour market for enslaved Americans. George, enslaved and hired out to a manufacturing job where he exercises his talents and innovativeness, is removed from the job at the whim of his owner, despite the manufacturer’s willingness to bid a higher rate for George’s ser- vices.
    [Show full text]
  • African American Reparations, Human Rights, and the War on Terror
    Michigan Law Review Volume 101 Issue 5 2003 American Racial Jusice on Trial - Again: African American Reparations, Human Rights, and the War on Terror Eric K. Yamamoto William S. Richardson School of Law, University of Hawai'i Susan K. Serrano Equal Justice Society Michelle Natividad Rodriguez Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr Part of the Civil Rights and Discrimination Commons, Human Rights Law Commons, International Law Commons, Law and Race Commons, and the Supreme Court of the United States Commons Recommended Citation Eric K. Yamamoto, Susan K. Serrano & Michelle N. Rodriguez, American Racial Jusice on Trial - Again: African American Reparations, Human Rights, and the War on Terror, 101 MICH. L. REV. 1269 (2003). Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr/vol101/iss5/6 This Essay is brought to you for free and open access by the Michigan Law Review at University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Michigan Law Review by an authorized editor of University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. AMERICAN RACIAL JUSTICE ON TRIAL - . AGAIN: AFRICAN AMERICAN REPARATIONS, HUMAN RIGHTS, AND THE WAR· ON TERROR Eric K. Yamamoto,* Susan K. Serrano,** and Michelle Natividad Rodriguez*** Few questions challenge us to consider 380 years of history all at once, to tunnel inside our souls to discover what we truly believe about race and equality and the value of human suffering. - Kevin Merida1 (on African American reparations) Secretary of State Colin L. Powell said today that terrorists can only be attacked from "the highest moral plan" and that there is no contradiction between the Bush Administration's war on terrorism and a continuing U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Tragedy & Remedy: Reparations for Disparities in Black Health
    Boston University School of Law Scholarly Commons at Boston University School of Law Faculty Scholarship 2005 Tragedy & Remedy: Reparations for Disparities in Black Health Kevin Outterson Boston Univeristy School of Law Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.bu.edu/faculty_scholarship Part of the Civil Rights and Discrimination Commons Recommended Citation Kevin Outterson, Tragedy & Remedy: Reparations for Disparities in Black Health, 9 DePaul Journal of Health Care Law 735 (2005). Available at: https://scholarship.law.bu.edu/faculty_scholarship/399 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarly Commons at Boston University School of Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of Scholarly Commons at Boston University School of Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. TRAGEDY AND REMEDY: REPARATIONS FOR DISPARITIES IN BLACK HEALTH ∗ Kevin Outterson INTRODUCTION The Tragedy of American health care is the stubborn persistence of disparities in Black health,1 140 years after Emancipation, and more than four decades after the passage of Title VI. Formal legal equality has not translated into actual health equality. This Tragedy is deeper and older than mere legal forms; it has been supported by powerful social institutions, including some governments, charities, market participants, religions, ideologies, and cultures. Black health disparities interact with other vestiges of slavery such as disparities in wealth, education, employment and housing. They have permeated the American health experience. Efforts to eliminate Black health disparities will require something more transformative than Title VI. The history of oppression in America is laid bare by Black disparities in health.
    [Show full text]
  • Reparations in the Caribbean and Diaspora Prilly Bicknell-Hersco
    Reparations in the Caribbean and Diaspora Prilly Bicknell-Hersco Introduction Millions of people have been victim to violent and inhumane social injustices, many of them based on racial and cultural hierarchies. The Nazi Holocaust or the colonization of North America through the genocide of indigenous populations are examples of such instances. When these victims have no direct claim on those who committed the harm, the victims turn to the government for reparations. It can be said that the enslavement of Africans in the Caribbean is another painful and violent injustice, yet few reparations, if any at all, have been paid out to those most affected by the transatlantic slave trade. In 2013, CARICOM released an official request for Reparations for the Native Genocide and Slavery from the United Kingdom and the other European colonies. The discussion of reparations for slavery has ignited debate worldwide. Transformative justice is a philosophical way of handling conflict and violence. It looks to provide immediate safety, long-term healing, and reparations for victims. Transformative justice attempts to hold those who commit the violence accountable by ending the immediate abuse, committing to avoid abuse in the future, and offering reparations for past abuse. “For reparations to be meaningful, or at least for them to be meaningfully transformative, there needs to be a focus on both the process and outcomes of reparations programs. Moreover, reparations programs need to consider what the intended recipients want and need” (Evans and Wilkes 139). This thought process has led officials to take different approaches to provide reparations, including different policies and procedures beyond exclusively financial payments.
    [Show full text]
  • Transformative Justice, Reparations and Transatlantic Slavery Abstract
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Sussex Research Online Authors: Matthew Evans and David Wilkins Journal: Social and Legal Studies (accepted 14th November 2017) Transformative justice, reparations and transatlantic slavery Abstract This paper considers lessons recent debates concerning transitional and transformative justice, and surrounding transformative reparations, could offer to discussions regarding reparations for transatlantic slavery. Even transitional justice programmes aiming to provide transformative reparations in the form of development programmes (such as healthcare, education and housing provision) have enabled governments to avoid addressing structural causes of inequalities. The paper argues that calling for reparations for transatlantic slavery in the form of development projects is potentially regressive. Framing development programmes as reparations, as parts of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Ten Point Plan for reparations do, risks presenting these as necessary only because of powerful states’ duty to make amends for past wrongdoing. The paper calls for advocates of reparations for transatlantic slavery to be more explicit in demarcating the backward- and forward-looking foundations of their claims. The importance of symbolic and non-financial reparations ought to be more explicitly highlighted as a potential contributor to the social repair of transatlantic slavery’s harmful legacies. Moreover, distributive justice should be explicitly emphasised as being necessary to realise the present-day and future rights of 1 people suffering from the historical legacy of transatlantic slavery and not simply because the present situation is the result of historical injustice. Keywords: Reparations; transatlantic slavery; transformative justice; Caribbean Community (CARICOM); human rights; historical wrongs 2 Introduction In 2014 the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) proposed a Ten Point Plan for reparations to address the legacies of transatlantic slavery (Leigh Day, 2014).
    [Show full text]
  • Reparations in an Obama World
    8.0 OUTTERSON FINAL 4/24/2009 8:27:56 AM The End of Reparations Talk: Reparations in an Obama World Kevin Outterson* I. INTRODUCTION Several years ago, I wrote an article on reparations for disparities in Black health in the United States.1 The world did little note nor long remember what I said in that article. But, the University of Kansas Law Review has rescued my thoughts from obscurity, at least temporarily. My thesis proceeded in three parts: (1) U.S. disparities in Black health are dangerous and persistent;2 (2) Black health disparities cannot be viewed in isolation from our history of slavery, racism, and legal segregation;3 and (3) superficial remedial efforts are not likely to be * Associate Professor of Law, Boston University School of Law. My thanks are again offered to my colleague andre douglas pond cummings at the West Virginia University College of Law for his thoughtful comments. 1. Kevin Outterson, Tragedy and Remedy: Reparations for Disparities in Black Health, 9 DEPAUL J. HEALTH CARE L. 735 (2005) [hereinafter Outterson, Tragedy & Remedy]. 2. INST. OF MED. OF THE NAT’L ACAD., UNEQUAL TREATMENT: CONFRONTING RACIAL AND ETHNIC DISPARITIES IN HEALTH CARE 29–30 (Brian D. Smedley et al. eds., 2003). 3. The legal literature on racial disparities in health is significant. See, e.g., VERNELLIA R. RANDALL, DYING WHILE BLACK 63–92 (2006); Heather K. Aeschleman, The White World of Nursing Homes: The Myriad Barriers to Access Facing Today’s Elderly Minorities, 8 ELDER L.J. 367, 367–91 (2000); Ian Ayres et al., Unequal Racial Access to Kidney Transplantation, 46 VAND.
    [Show full text]
  • Why Reparations Are in Order for African Americans
    Documenting the Costs of Slavery, Segregation, and Contemporary Racism: Why Reparations Are in Order for African Americans Joe R. Feagin* I. Introduction Without signiªcant reparations for African Americans, the deepest ra- cial divide in the United States will never be eliminated. As Randall Robinson has put it in The Debt: What America Owes to Blacks, “if . Afri- can Americans will not be compensated for the massive wrongs and so- cial injuries inºicted upon them by their government, during and after slavery, then there is no chance that America can solve its racial prob- lems.”1 This is a strong statement, yet true. In this Article, I examine why large-scale reparations should be made to African Americans and how that task might be accomplished. In a pio- neering 1973 book, The Case for Black Reparations, Yale law professor Boris Bittker argued that the oppression faced by African Americans was more extensive than that faced by other racial groups and required major repa- rations in compensation.2 At the time, almost no one paid any attention to his analysis. Today, however, many analysts have ªnally resurrected the idea of reparations and have begun to take action on that idea. There are many voices concerned about the high costs of anti-black oppression that have continued over four centuries. It seems ever more likely that repara- tions in some form will be paid to African Americans over the next half century.3 II. Unjust Enrichment and Unjust Impoverishment What are the grounds for large-scale reparations for African Ameri- cans? The basic rationale for group compensation lies in the stolen labor * Ella McFadden Professor of Liberal Arts, Texas A&M University.
    [Show full text]
  • Reparations to African-Americans: the Only Remedy for the U.S. Government’S Failure to Enforce the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments
    Reparations to African-Americans: The Only Remedy for the U.S. Government’s Failure to Enforce the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments † EDIETH Y. WU I. INTRODUCTION This article takes a hard look at U.S. history: the political, the social, and the legal landscape after the passage of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments. The author wholeheartedly believes that the Reparations dialogue must continue. Many, including well-educated Americans, are solidly divided on this important issue and have taken the position that Reparations should be buried because American slaves are buried. In spite of the difficulties, we must study and question the societal norms that led to major changes in the United States and forge ahead to find a solution to the issues that adversely affect a major portion of America’s citizenry. Reparations have been used internationally as well as domestically and are not novel theories. The U.S. has not realized the great society that so many projected was possible for this nation. Like the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa1 after Apartheid, the U.S. must come to grips with its failures and shortcomings as they relate to a major sector of its population. Therefore, this article first examines the Thirteenth Amendment, its purposes, and failures.2 Next, the Fourteenth Amendment’s purposes and failures are analyzed.3 Third, the Fifteenth Amendment is analyzed.4 Finally, the article concludes5 that † Interim Associate Dean and Associate Professor of Law, Thurgood Marshall School of Law at Texas Southern University. The Author thanks the following: God, Mary Salazar, Suzanne Crockett, her Administrative Assistant J.
    [Show full text]
  • The Mauritian Truth and Justice Commission: Legitimacy, Political Negotiation and the Consequences of Slavery
    Middlesex University Research Repository An open access repository of Middlesex University research http://eprints.mdx.ac.uk Croucher, Richard ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9617-734X, Houssart, Mark ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8536-8220 and Michel, Didier (2017) The Mauritian Truth and Justice Commission: legitimacy, political negotiation and the consequences of slavery. African Journal of International and Comparative Law, 25 (3) . pp. 326-346. ISSN 0954-8890 [Article] (doi:10.3366/ajicl.2017.0198) Final accepted version (with author’s formatting) This version is available at: https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/19086/ Copyright: Middlesex University Research Repository makes the University’s research available electronically. Copyright and moral rights to this work are retained by the author and/or other copyright owners unless otherwise stated. The work is supplied on the understanding that any use for commercial gain is strictly forbidden. A copy may be downloaded for personal, non-commercial, research or study without prior permission and without charge. Works, including theses and research projects, may not be reproduced in any format or medium, or extensive quotations taken from them, or their content changed in any way, without first obtaining permission in writing from the copyright holder(s). They may not be sold or exploited commercially in any format or medium without the prior written permission of the copyright holder(s). Full bibliographic details must be given when referring to, or quoting from full items including the author’s name, the title of the work, publication details where relevant (place, publisher, date), pag- ination, and for theses or dissertations the awarding institution, the degree type awarded, and the date of the award.
    [Show full text]