A meticulous and exhaustive accounting of the total economic devastation wreaked on Black communities by mass incarceration with an action guide for vital reparations.
Stolen Wealth, Hidden Power is a staggering account of the destruction wrought by mass incarceration. Finding that the economic value of the damages to Black individuals, families, and communities totals $7.15 trillion—roughly 86 percent of the current Black–White wealth gap—this compelling and exhaustive analysis puts unprecedented empirical heft behind an urgent call for reparations.
Much of the damage of mass incarceration, Tasseli McKay finds, has been silently absorbed by families and communities of the incarcerated—where it is often compensated for by women’s invisible labor. Four decades of state-sponsored violence have destroyed the health, economic potential, and political power of Black Americans across generations. Grounded in principles of transitional justice that have guided other nations in moving past eras of state violence, Stolen Wealth, Hidden Power presents a comprehensive framework for how to begin intensive individual and institutional reparations. The extent of mass incarceration’s racialized harms, estimated here with new rigor and scope, points to the urgency of this work and the possibilities that lie beyond it.
Stolen Wealth, Hidden Power The Case for Reparations for Mass Incarceration
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About the Book
Reviews
"Tasseli McKay brilliantly draws on historical facts and cultural context to describe the immense cost and harm the prison industrial complex has had on Black families for generations. McKay accounts, in great detail, how the carceral system in this country is a failed experiment, and she urges us to reckon with this legacy and expand our understanding of reparations. This text is an important contribution to our liberation work as abolitionists, as we create systems that center an economy of care and move away from harm and punishment."—Patrisse Cullors, New York Times–bestselling author, educator, artist, and abolitionist
"This study of black overincarceration in the United States combines compassion and rigor. McKay also provides, for the first time, a systematic, comprehensive calculation of the monetary costs to African Americans of the nation's predisposition to mass incarceration. This is a vital contribution to the wider conversation on reparations for Black American descendants of US chattel slavery."—William Darity, Director, Samuel DuBois Cook Center on Social Equity, Duke University
"McKay writes with an unvarnished honesty and makes a compelling case for reparations for Black Americans. Her analysis clearly shows that the imprisonment of Black bodies, from slavery to convict leasing to mass incarceration, has been a staple of the United States since its inception. The case for reparations is not only because restitution must be paid to Black people. It is also how America can heal from its racial woes."—Rashawn Ray, Professor of Sociology, University of Maryland