====== Week 12—Due for repair ====== ===== Week 12—Due for repair ===== **Main reading:** Luke and Heynen (2020); Scott (2021) **Other reading:** Beyers (2013); Draus et al. (2019); Gilbert and Williams (2020); Small and Minner (2024) Can problems of structural inequality be remedied by reparations? What would happen if we gave land back? ===== References ===== Beyers, Christiaan. 2013. “Urban Land Restitution and the Struggle for Social Citizenship in South Africa.” //Development and Change// 44 (4): 965–89. https://doi.org/10.1111/dech.12041. Draus, Paul, Dagmar Haase, Jacob Napieralski, Juliette Roddy, and Salman Qureshi. 2019. “Wounds, Ghosts and Gardens: Historical Trauma and Green Reparations in Berlin and Detroit.” //Cities// 93 (October): 153–63. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2019.05.002. Gilbert, Jessica L., and Rebekah A. Williams. 2020. “Pathways to Reparations: Land and Healing Through Food Justice.” //Human Geography// 13 (3): 228–41. https://doi.org/10.1177/1942778620951936. Luke, Nikki, and Nik Heynen. 2020. “Community Solar as Energy Reparations: Abolishing Petro-Racial Capitalism in New Orleans.” //American Quarterly// 72 (3): 603–25. https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/article/765825. Scott, Sydni. 2021. “Community Land Trusts: A Case for an Expansive View of Reparations for Black Americans.” //N.Y.U. American Public Policy Review//, June. https://doi.org/10.21428/4b58ebd1.0a4497f5. Small, Zachary, and Jennifer S. Minner. 2024. “Do Land Banks Mean Progress Toward Socially Equitable Urban Development? Observations from New York State.” //Urban Affairs Review// 60 (1): 272–303. https://doi.org/10.1177/10780874231169923. {{page>DVST-6901guide}}