Past Due
Why Reparations to Black Americans and American Indians Are Overdue Featuring One White Woman’s Debt
- Author(s): Angela Zera Allen , Courtney Carmichael ,
- Publisher: Angela Zera Allen
- Pages: 163
- Language: en
- Categories: Biography & Autobiography / Women , Biography & Autobiography / Historical , Biography & Autobiography / Personal Memoirs , Biography & Autobiography / Political , Biography & Autobiography / Social Activists , Social Science / Race & Ethnic Relations , History / African American & Black , Social Science / Ethnic Studies / American / Native American Studies , Business & Economics / Business Ethics , Business & Economics / Corporate & Business History ,
Description:... After centuries of theft, murder, oppression, discrimination, exclusion, and broken promises experienced by Black Americans and American Indians, at the hands of the U.S. government, U.S. courts, and many racist White people, reparations are due. They are past due. But why? Who is responsible for this reckoning? What would it look like? These are some of the questions you may be asking yourself. In Past Due, authors Angie Allen and Courtney Carmichael try to answer these questions as reporters might. Drawing on history, current factual realities, their own personal stories, and insights from a wide range of activists, writers, scholars, and other experts, they share their findings and experience, to help create better understanding. Past Due is full of easy-to-use links to learning more, and a roadmap to making reparations. Sweeping government policy and corporate policy change is essential for making reparations. But Angie and Courtney hope that Past Due will inspire more White Americans to examine their individual roles, past and future.
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