Featured Audio
This Land is My Land
The Racial Wealth Gap’s Roots in Federal Policy
The promise of “40 acres and a mule” officially was made in 1865. The U.S. government decided that newly freed African Americans should have a plot of land to call their own. Three years earlier, when 90% of African Americans still were enslaved, the federal government enacted the Homestead Act and started offering free 160 acre plots of land to settlers, mostly white Americans.
A tale of two promises made by the government – one kept, one broken. What happened, and what does this have to do with the existing wealth gap between African Americans and white Americans? Find out in this episode.
The Ways & Means podcast series “The Arc of Justice – From Here to Equality” is inspired by the research of the economist William A. “Sandy” Darity Jr. Darity is the Samuel DuBois Cook Distinguished Professor of Public Policy at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. He has written an award-winning book with the folklorist and arts consultant A. Kirsten Mullen, From Here to Equality: Reparations for Black Americans in the 21st Century.
Resources
- Read the book From Here to Equality: Reparations for Black Americans in the 21st Century
- Read Neil Bhutta et al’s article, Disparities in Wealth by Race and Ethnicity in the 2019 Survey of Consumer Finances (September 28, 2020).
- Learn more about the Homestead Act in this article by Trina R. Williams, “Asset-building Policy As a Response to Wealth Inequality: Drawing Implications from the Homestead Act” (2003).
- Explore this study on Tracing Family, Teaching Race in which Jennifer Mueller challenged students to look into their family’s financial histories regarding the Homestead Act (2013).
- Read episode transcript
- Download the discussion guide
- Subscribe to the live series finale