For more than one hundred and fifty years African Americans have made demands that the federal government redress and repair the catastrophic social, emotional, political and economic consequences of slavery in this nation. In this new essential book, Repair: Redeeming the Promise of Abolition, legal scholar Katherine Franke engages the original debates concerning the conditions upon which newly freed Black people would rebuild their lives after slavery. Franke powerfully illustrates the repercussions of the unfilled promise of land redistribution and other broken promises that consigned African Americans to another one hundred years of second-class citizenship. Franke passionately argues that the continuation of those vast disparities between Black and white people in U.S. society-a product of slavery itself-means that the struggle for reparations remains a relevant demand in the current movements for racial justice.
-Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation
Repair revisits the revolutionary era of Reconstruction, that brief moment in the sun in the words of W.E. B. Du Bois, when the redistribution of land and wealth as recompense for unrequited toil could have secured genuine freedom for Black people rather than a future of racial inequality, exploitation, marginalization, and precarity. To being the road to repair, Katherine Franke makes a persuasive case for reparations as at least a first step toward creating the conditions for genuine freedom and justice, not only for African Americans but for all of us.
-Robin D. G. Kelley, Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination
Katherine Franke argues for a type of Black freedom that is material and felt-freedom that is more than a poetic nod to claims of American moral comeuppance. Repair: Redeeming The Promise of Abolition is a critical text for our times that demands an honest reckoning with the consequences, and afterlife, of the sin that was chattel enslavement. It is bold call for reparations and costly atonement. -Darnell L. Moore,
No Ashes in the Fire: Coming of Age Black & Free in America Katherine Franke is consistently one of the sharpest, most conscientious thinkers in progressive politics. In a time defined by crisis and conflict, Katherine is among that small number of thinkers whom I find indispensable. -Jelani Cobb,
New Yorker columnist and author,
The Substance of Hope