Reparations in Higher Education

The Reparations in Higher Education platform seeks to reimagine racial justice and equity in universities and colleges across the country.

A Scholars for Social Justice Platform

While universities are often viewed as ivory towers, far from everyday politics, the university is both deeply embedded in structures of racial hierarchy and remains a crucial site for reimagining education and society more broadly. This platform seeks to boldly reimagine racial justice in higher education through a framework of reparations. We consider the multiple roles of the university, analyze how institutions of higher education have reproduced racial inequality, and outline policies, campaigns, and approaches that repair relations of injustice.    

Why Reparations at Universities?

While many calls for reparations single out the state as the primary perpetrator of racial harm and thus also as the primary site for demanding redress, universities have also played a historical and on-going role in perpetuating racial inequality.

Reparations in higher education requires examining the multiple roles of the university from employer to investor. Click on the links below to examine the history of this project and explore how a reparatory framework can transform the different dimensions of the University.

Project History

University as Neighbor

University as Employer

The University and Mass Incarceration

Student Debt

The Global University