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Taxed for Being Black
The long arc of racist plunder through local tax codes is shocking—or, well, maybe it’s not, really.
by
Victor Ray
via
Democracy Journal
on
June 13, 2024
Tax History Matters: A Q&A with the Author of ‘The Black Tax’
The history of the property tax system and its structural defects that have led to widespread discrimination against Black Americans.
by
Andrew W. Kahrl
,
Brakeyshia Samms
via
Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy
on
April 24, 2024
partner
The Surprising Roots of Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Idea of National Divorce
Greene probably has visions of suburban Atlanta in the 1990s and 2000s, not the Civil War.
by
Michan Connor
via
Made By History
on
March 14, 2023
Tax Regimes
Historian Robin Einhorn reflects on Americans’ complicated relationship to taxes, from the colonial period through the Civil War to the tax revolts of the 1980s.
by
Robin Einhorn
,
Noam Maggor
via
Phenomenal World
on
March 24, 2022
All Stick No Carrot: Racism, Property Tax Assessments, and Neoliberalism Post 1945 Chicago
Black homeowners have been an oft ignored actor in metropolitan history despite playing a central role.
via
The Metropole
on
May 9, 2019
The Deeper Problem Behind the Sale of a Posh San Francisco Street
The news that a posh San Francisco street was sold for delinquent taxes exposes the deeper issue with America’s local revenue system.
by
Brent Cebul
via
CityLab
on
August 18, 2017
Suppressing the Black Vote in 1811
As more Black men gained the right to vote in New York, the state began to change its laws to reduce their power or disenfranchise them completely.
by
Livia Gershon
,
Sarah L. H. Gronningsater
via
JSTOR Daily
on
February 23, 2024
The Racist Idea that Changed American Education
How a landmark Supreme Court decision was shaped by the racist idea that poor children can’t learn.
by
Matt Barnum
via
Vox
on
February 13, 2023
Financing Schools
On school funding and America’s kleptocratic public school divide.
by
Esther Cyna
via
Phenomenal World
on
May 12, 2022
Hilton Head Island— Haunted by Its Own History
Historical traces of racism and exclusion remain on the island. It’s just that new residents can’t—or won’t—read them.
by
Alexa Hazel
via
Public Books
on
July 20, 2021
The Austerity Politics of White Supremacy
Since the end of the Confederacy, the cult of the “taxpayer” has provided a socially acceptable veneer for racist attacks on democracy.
by
Vanessa Williamson
via
Dissent
on
January 11, 2021
Fight For Economic Equality Is As Old as America Itself
Fears of great wealth and the need for economic equality go back to the country’s origins.
by
Daniel R. Mandell
via
The Conversation
on
August 4, 2020
Tearing Down Black America
Policing is not the only kind of state violence. City governments have demolished hundreds of Black neighborhoods in the name of urban renewal.
by
Brent Cebul
via
Boston Review
on
July 22, 2020
When Conservatives Called to Freeze Police Budgets
The loudest opponents to police funding were once fiscal conservatives.
by
David Helps
via
The Metropole
on
July 22, 2020
The Brothers Who Spent Eight Years in Jail for Refusing to Leave Their Family's Land
Their great-grandfather had bought the land a hundred years earlier, when he was a generation removed from slavery.
by
Lizzie Presser
via
ProPublica
on
July 15, 2019
The Public Costs of Private Growth
Amazon, the Great Depression, and the fiscal history #HQ2 supporters miss.
by
Daniel Wortel-London
via
The Metropole
on
January 28, 2019
The Value of Farmland: Rural Gentrification and the Movement to Stop Sprawl
Rapidly rising metropolitan land value can mean "striking gold" for some landowners while threatening the livelihood of others.
by
Angela Hope Stiefbold
via
The Metropole
on
September 12, 2018
The School Massacre that Shocked Bath, Michigan
The chilling tale of a tragedy that was seemingly erased from the American consciousness.
by
Bruce Kaplan
via
We're History
on
May 18, 2018
Housing Segregation In Everything
In 1968, the Fair Housing Act made it illegal to discriminate in housing. So why are neighborhoods still so segregated?
by
Gene Demby
,
Maria Paz Gutierrez
,
Kara Frame
via
NPR
on
April 11, 2018
What Did the Three-Fifths Compromise Actually Do?
It was motivated in part by white Southerners' concerns about taxes, but ended up being all about maintaining their political power.
by
Alex Sayf Cummings
via
Tropics of Meta
on
April 17, 2015
How the Suburbs Became a Trap
Neighborhoods that once promised prosperity now offer crumbling infrastructure, aged housing stock, and social animus.
by
Caitlin Zaloom
via
The New Republic
on
April 18, 2024
Developers Have Black Families Fighting to Maintain Property and History
All along the South Carolina coast, developers looking to profit on vacation getaways and new homes are targeting land owned by descendants of enslaved people.
by
James Pollard
via
AP News
on
August 12, 2023
The Rise of the UniverCity
Historian Davarian Baldwin explains how universities have come to wield the kind of power that were once hallmarks of ruthless employers in company towns.
by
Davarian L. Baldwin
,
Meagan Day
via
Jacobin
on
September 2, 2021
The Truman Show
How the 33rd president finagled his way to a post–White House fortune — and created a damaging precedent.
by
Paul Campos
via
Intelligencer
on
July 24, 2021
The US Tax Code Should Not Allow Billionaires to Exist
The recent ProPublica exposé shows we need to attack the wealth and power of the rich — and that means massively increasing taxes on them.
by
Josh Mound
via
Jacobin
on
July 20, 2021
partner
What Early American Infrastructure Politics Can Teach the Biden Administration
Infrastructure plans are always political. The key is being inclusive and focusing on the public good.
by
Keith Pluymers
,
Harrison Diskin
via
Made By History
on
March 16, 2021
Boroughed Time
Confronting a long tradition of projecting fantasies onto the South Bronx.
by
Sasha Frere-Jones
via
Bookforum
on
September 3, 2020
Taxing the Superrich
For the sake of justice and democracy, we need a progressive wealth tax.
by
Emmanuel Saez
,
Gabriel Zucman
via
Boston Review
on
February 3, 2020
The Supreme Court Decision That Kept Suburban Schools Segregated
A 1974 Supreme Court decision found that school segregation was allowable if it wasn’t being done on purpose.
by
Jon Hale
via
The Conversation
on
July 24, 2019
Even the Dead Could Not Stay
An illustrated history of urban renewal in Roanoke, Virginia.
by
Martha Park
via
CityLab
on
January 19, 2018
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