Volume 41, Issue 4 pp. 824-832
ARTICLE

When More than Property Is Lost: The Dignity Losses and Restoration of the Tulsa Riot of 1921

Alfred L. Brophy

Alfred L. Brophy

Alfred Brophy: is the Judge John J. Parker Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill. Contact the author at [email protected]. He thanks the anonymous referees for their thoughtful and useful comments.

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First published: 28 June 2016
Citations: 6

Abstract

Bernadette Atuahene's We Want What's Ours focuses on deprivations that go beyond property losses. Her focus is on the dignity harms to South Africans over centuries, such as denial of citizenship, that accompanied the theft of their land. I focus here on one grotesque episode of violence, the Tulsa race riot of 1921, to gauge dignity takings in a US context. Thousands were, in the parlance of the times, run out of town in a “negro drive.” They lost property, but also their community, and they could not assert their rights after the riot. This article turns to the ways in which African Americans in Oklahoma obtained rights through the courts that should have been protected around the time of the riot. This expands our sense of the range of responses, from apologies and compensation, to additional judicial process and substantive rights, that are needed for past racial crimes.

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