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Rethinking Racial Justice
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
1. Introduction: Race and Justice
2. Racial Inequality and Black Reparations
3. Justice, Acknowledgement, and Collective Memory
4. Supporting Black Institutions and Communities
5. Affirmative Action
6. Justice and Residential Segregation
7. Racial Justice and Criminal Justice
8. Common Schools and Black Schools
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

About the Author

Andrew Valls is Professor of Political Science at Oregon State University.

Reviews

"Andrew Valls's Rethinking Racial Justice is a splendid presentation and defense of the demands of justice as it applies to African Americans. Topics that have distracted attention from essentials-multiculturalism, diversity, identity politics, 'recognition' and ideal theory, for example- are fairly considered and firmly set aside. The focus is on justice and liberal theory. Drawing on this tradition of political philosophy that influenced the authors
of the Declaration of Independence and the framers of the United States Constitution, Valls provides an unmatched defense of the justice of Black Reparations and Affirmative Action, a measured case for
supporting black institutions, and a convincing critique of the claim that integration is a necessary part of racial justice." -Bernard Boxill, Emeritus Professor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
"The two years since Donald Trump's election should have disabused all but the most delusional of the notion that the United States had become a 'post-racial' society. This urgent text, appearing a half-century after Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination, makes a detailed and convincing case-written with both passion and exemplary clarity-for the re-centering of racial justice (not an obfuscatory 'diversity') on the national agenda, and its
congruence, despite nay-sayers, with fundamental liberal norms and ideals." -Charles W. Mills, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, CUNY Graduate Center
"Creatively combining liberal political theory, a transitional justice framework, and neglected insights from black radical thought, Andrew Valls unflinchingly addresses the most challenging and controversial issues of racial justice facing African Americans. His analyses are fresh, sophisticated, and rigorous, and his often surprising conclusions break, in productive ways, from liberal orthodoxy. This is an excellent and timely contribution to ongoing debates
over what abstract theories of justice mean on the ground." -Tommie Shelby, author of Dark Ghettos: Injustice, Dissent, and Reform
"In Rethinking Racial Justice, Andrew Valls shows how commonplace assumptions about diversity and integration are misplaced. Drawing on ideas from transitional justice, Black nationalism and liberal egalitarianism, Valls presents a compelling case for understanding racial injustice as a singular unfairness, and as something that should not be assimilated to other kinds of injustice. Rethinking Racial Justice resets our national conversation
about race, diversity and equality in important ways." -Jeff Spinner-Halev, Kenan Eminent Professor of Political Ethics, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
"In this brilliant book, Andrew Valls presents a sharp and accessible analysis of, and argument for, racial justice. Corrective justice to rectify the harms of racial discrimination and oppression against African Americans is at the heart of his analysis, which is applied across a range of topics from debates over monuments to residential and educational integration to criminal justice. Valls reminds us about how demanding liberal theories of justice ought to
be and in doing so pushes the boundaries of liberal egalitarian political philosophy." -Ronald R. Sundstrom, author of The Browning of America and the Evasion of Social Justice
"The focus here is on American racial inequality. Valls (Oregon State) focuses on the perpetual plight of African Americans regarding liberty, equality, and justice, all of which ought to be granted to citizens of the US. This is a long-standing problem. It is argued that neither the racial injustices of the past nor present racial injustices have been addressed in any concrete way and that unless a massive shift occurs in American culture, the immediate
future does not project to be any different...Though relying on various academic texts to support his arguments, the author has written a clear, accessible text. This is an important, unflinching look at a
shameful part of American life, and its pages ought to have a wide audience." -- P. Gamsby, Memorial University of Newfoundland

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