Fr. 30.90

Reconsidering Reparations - Why Climate Justice and Constructive Politics Are Needed in the Wake of Slavery and Colonialism

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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A pathbreaking book about world history, global justice, and the climate crisis-featuring a new preface by the author.

"Coursing with moral urgency and propelled by brilliant prose, this is more than argument. It's how we build the power needed to win."

-Naomi Klein

A clear, new case for reparations as a "constructive," future-oriented project that responds to the weight of history's injustices with the equitable distribution of benefits and burdens. Centuries ago, Tбнwт explains, European powers engineered the systems through which advantages and disadvantages still flow. Colonialism and transatlantic slavery forged schemes of injustice on an unprecedented scale, a world order he calls "global racial empire." The project of justice must meet the same scope.

Tбнwт's analysis not only discourages despair, it demands global resistance. Reconsidering Reparations suggests policies, goals, and organizing strategies. And it leaves readers with clear and powerful advice: act like an ancestor. Do what we can to shape the world we want our moral descendants to inherit, and have faith that they will continue the long struggle for justice. This understanding, Tбнwт shows, has deep roots in the thought of Black political thinkers such as James Baldwin, Martin Luther King, Jr., Cedric Robinson, and Nkechi Taifa.

Reconsidering Reparations is a book with profound implications for our views of justice, racism, the legacies of slavery and colonialism, and climate change policy.


List of contents










Preface to the paperback edition



Chapter 1: Introduction



Chapter 2: Reconsidering World History



Chapter 3: The Constructive View



Chapter 4: What's Missing



Chapter 5: What's Next



Chapter 6: The Arc of the Moral Universe



Appendix A: The Malê Revolt



Appendix B: Colonialism and Climate Vulnerability

About the author










Olúf¿¿mi O. Táíwò is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University and a fellow at the Climate and Community Institute. He is the author of the critically acclaimed book Elite Capture, a contributor to Greta Thunberg's The Climate Book, and a past recipient of a Marguerite Casey Freedom Scholar fellowship. Táíwò's public philosophy, including articles exploring intersections of climate justice and colonialism, has been featured in The GuardianThe New YorkerThe New RepublicThe NationBoston ReviewDissentAl Jazeera, Foreign Policy, Hammer & Hope (where he is a member of the Editorial Team). His writings have been translated into Brazilian Portuguese, French, German, Italian, and Korean, among other languages.


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