Boston Reparations Task Force
The city and task force selected researchers to conduct both original historical research and provide a comprehensive review of major themes and findings on the city’s history from 1620 to the present in a written report.
A budget of $500,000 will support the effort, and funding comes from the annual operating budget and federal relief funds.
Tufts University and community partners: The contracts are awarded to Kerri Greenidge, Mellon associate professor in the Department of Studies of Race, Colonialism, and Diaspora at Tufts University; Kendra Field, history professor and director of the Center for the Study of Race and Democracy at Tufts University; and Kyera Singleton, executive director of the Royall House and Slave Quarters. Their team will review the years 1620 to 1940.
Northeastern University and community partners: A coalition from Northeastern University, led by Margaret Burnham, director of the Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project, and Deborah Jackson, managing director of the Center for Law, Equity and Race, will cover the years from 1940 to the present. The team also includes Ted Landsmark, professor of public policy and urban affairs at Northeastern; community leader Donna Bivens, and Richard O’Bryant, director of the John D. O’Bryant African American Institute.
Browse the work of the Institute on:
Reparations Efforts
In addition to the ongoing reparations efforts led by the Task Force, the Othering & Belonging Institute has provided a synopsis and summary of extant reparations efforts in the U.S. and around the world. These findings are described in the introductory essay of our Structural Racism Remedies Repository.
More from OBI on Reparations
Video: The future of freedom: Reparations after 400 years
Video: EJ Toppin on resistance to reparations as a crisis of national identity
Contact
Email: belonging@berkeley.edu
