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Manchester Grand Hyatt, Marina
Hosted By:
National Association of Forensic Economics & National Economic Association
Enslavement, Racial Inequality and Making Victims Whole
Paper Session
Friday, Jan. 3, 2020 2:30 PM - 4:30 PM (PDT)
- Chair: Jerome S. Paige, Jerome S. Paige & Associates
CARICOM: Unjust Enrichment and the Case for Restitution
Abstract
Europe and North America have realized a super accumulation of “unjust enrichment,” which today is embedded in every asset class in these regions. After introducing the concept of “unjust enrichment,” the case is made for how unjust enrichment was attained. Drawing on economic development studies, a method of calculation of damages is presented. Using this method, a basis for restitution is established and program to carry out that restitution is suggested. This approach does not include any payment for non-economic damages like pain and suffering, or for crimes against humanity in slavery, the slave trade, or other forms of international criminal conduct. The approach only aims to recapture, recover, recoup, reclaim, reacquire the economic damages based on the benefits derived from unjust enrichmentFrom Here to Equality: A Framework for Restitution for Black Descendants of American Slavery
Abstract
This paper chronicles the story of the “unmet black reparations” that got its start with the legitimate expectations of the formerly enslaved that they would receive tracts of land and farm implements (“40 acres and a mule”) in the immediate aftermath of the Civil War. The reasons for the cyclical swings in the attention given to reparations by black Americans and America as a whole are examined, with a particular emphasis on the most recent developments. The paper also details how an actual reparations plan might be designed and enacted, in light of the evolution of thought about restitution for black Americans over the past 150 years, details which include an assessment of the potential of H.R.40 and S.1083 to meet the expectations of blacks for reparations. Consequently, a critical analysis is undertaken on the form and role of the proposed “Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans” and how an actual reparations program could be advanced in the Commission’s report. The analysis includes: how the size of the “reparations bill” might be determined; how the program might be administered; how the goals and guideposts for the success of the program can be established; how the funds from the reparations program might be allocated; and how the reparations bill might be financed. An argument is made that the reparations of black Americans are entirely feasible, at least in principle.Discussant(s)
Sibylle Scholz
,
Forensic Economist
Dania V. Francis
,
University of Massachusetts-Amherst
Jerome S. Paige
,
Jerome S. Paige & Associates
JEL Classifications
- K1 - Basic Areas of Law