The Color of Law

A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America

eBook, 368 pages

English language

Published July 9, 2017 by Liverlight.

ISBN:
978-1-63149-286-0
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OCLC Number:
1231508165

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Widely heralded as a "masterful" (Washington Post) and "essential" (Slate) history of the modern American metropolis, Richard Rothstein's The Color of Law offers "the most forceful argument ever published on how federal, state, and local governments gave rise to and reinforced neighborhood segregation" (William Julius Wilson). Exploding the myth of de facto segregation arising from private prejudice or the unintended consequences of economic forces, Rothstein describes how the American government systematically imposed residential segregation: with undisguised racial zoning; public housing that purposefully segregated previously mixed communities; subsidies for builders to create whites-only suburbs; tax exemptions for institutions that enforced segregation; and support for violent resistance to African Americans in white neighborhoods. A groundbreaking, "virtually indispensable" study that has already transformed our understanding of twentieth-century urban history (Chicago Daily Observer), The Color of Law forces us to face the obligation to remedy our unconstitutional past.

4 editions

Review of 'The color of law' on 'Goodreads'

I just finished The Color of Law. I suggest you read it. Rothstein's thesis is supported in crushing detail. The laws and history behind mortgages, zoning, and deeds are boring, but without an understanding of them, you don't understand government-sponsored apartheid in the United States.

"While private discrimination also deserves some share of the blame, Rothstein shows that “racially explicit policies of federal, state, and local governments…segregated every metropolitan area in the United States.” Government agencies used public housing to clear mixed neighborhoods and create segregated ones. Governments built highways as buffers to keep the races apart. They used federal mortgage insurance to usher in an era of suburbanization on the condition that developers keep blacks out. From New Dealers to county sheriffs, government agencies at every level helped impose segregation—not de facto but de jure."[1]

De facto: practices that exist in reality, even though they are not officially recognized …

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