Reparations proposals typically target wealth. Yet slavery’s and Jim Crow’s long echoes also steal time, such as by producing shorter Black lifespans even today. I argue that lost time should be considered an independent target for redress; identify challenges to doing so; and provide examples of what reparations redressing lost lifespan could look like. To identify quantitative targets for redress, I analyze area-level relationships between Black lifespans and six measures of intensity of slavery, Jim Crow, and racial terror. Results reveal inconsistent relationships across measures, suggesting difficulties in grounding a target for redress in such variation. Instead, I propose that policies aim to redress the national lifespan gap between White and Black Americans. The article concludes with a typology of potential strategies for such redress.
Authors
Related Organizations
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.2.04
- ISBN
- 2377-8253 2377-8261
- Published in
- United States of America
- Rights
- © 2024 Russell Sage Foundation. Wrigley-Field, Elizabeth. 2024. “Stolen Lives: Redress for Slavery’s and Jim Crow’s Ongoing Theft of Lifespan.” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 10(2): 88–112. https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.2.04. Direct correspondence to: Elizabeth Wrigley-Field, at ewf@umn.edu, 909 Social Sciences Building, 267 19th Ave S., Minneapolis, MN 55404, United States.