Justice  /  Argument

Reconsidering Reparations

Reparations must be rooted in a political context that will safeguard rather than erode the gains they make towards justice.


For better or worse, our world stands on the precipice of major changes. Our current energy system is driving a rapidly unfolding climate crisis, and the need for total transformation “at every level of society” is now the prevailing scientific opinion. Given this context, my recent book Reconsidering Reparations argues for two things. First, reparations for trans-Atlantic slavery and colonialism should be seen as a future-oriented project engaged in building a just social order. Second, if we accept that view, then reparations and the struggle for racial justice should be directly linked to the struggle for climate justice.

The book begins with a discussion of the world itself, and how we got here. There have often been large, continent-spanning systems of politics and trade. But a planet-sized political and economic system – what I term “global racial empire” – is a new development in human history, produced by the explorations and conquests of a handful of European empires, beginning in the 15th century. That system was made possible by genocide of Indigenous peoples, large-scale seizures of land, and human-trafficking of Africans across the Atlantic ocean. The global racial empire eventually produced the Industrial Revolution, global capitalism, and the energy system that produced climate change.

The wave of decolonization movements that ousted formal colonialism from much of Asia and Africa provide a particularly instructive example of a political response to this ignoble history that matches the scale of global racial empire itself. The global anticolonial movement formed regional alliances, challenged the basic structure of the United Nations and other international political organizations, and demanded a New International Economic Order with a different set of rules than the one that had emerged from the global racial empire. The actors in this struggle also importantly fought for redistribution of global wealth, from the First World (back) to the Third World.

These struggles and the ethos behind them inform the view of reparations I defend in the book: what I call the “constructive view.” The constructive view aims to rebuild our social environment itself in the direction of justice: redistributing resources and social advantages to create a just world. The target of the redistributions and structural changes would be a world structured by self-determination, one where people are empowered to participate democratically in deciding the course of their lives at home and at work.

Other ways of thinking about reparations focus on retributive or reconciliatory justice. On the first set of views, reparations are primarily concerned with punishing a group of people thought to be complicit with slavery or other colonial crimes, and/or rewarding a group of people who are harmed by the historical legacies of those crimes. On the latter kind of view, they are about repairing the present day relationships between the people or institutions deemed responsible for the injustices of the past and those whose identities were forged by those very injustices.