The Ryles Report

Ep. 204 - Don't Lose Big Mama's House: Professor Bernadette Atuahene on The Fight for Reparative Justice

50 min · 7 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Ep. 204 - Don't Lose Big Mama's House: Professor Bernadette Atuahene on The Fight for Reparative Justice

Descripción

On this episode of The Ryles Report, Richard Ryles sits down with Professor Bernadette Atuahene, a property law professor, community organizer, and scholar whose work focuses on land stolen from Black people. Professor Atuahene is the author of Plunder: How Public Finance Became Public Theft, as well as We Want What’s Ours: Learning from South Africa’s Land Restitution Program. Her research has taken her from South Africa’s post-apartheid land restitution efforts to Detroit, where she uncovered widespread, unconstitutional property tax assessments that devastated Black homeowners and contributed to mass tax foreclosures.  Together, Richard and Professor Atuahene discuss how racist policies—not just individual prejudice—shape housing, wealth, and opportunity in America. They explore Detroit’s property tax foreclosure crisis, the impact of redlining, racial covenants, urban renewal, blockbusting, appraisal bias, heirs’ property, and the racial wealth gap. Professor Atuahene also explains her work with the Coalition for Property Tax Justice and the Dignity Restoration Project, which seeks compensation for Detroit residents harmed by illegally inflated property taxes. The conversation also turns to South Africa, land theft, reparations, and what communities can do to challenge unjust tax systems and protect Black homeownership. Listen in, learn something new, and join the conversation online. Use the hashtag #TheRylesReport to share your thoughts on social media.

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episode Ep. 204 - Don't Lose Big Mama's House: Professor Bernadette Atuahene on The Fight for Reparative Justice artwork

Ep. 204 - Don't Lose Big Mama's House: Professor Bernadette Atuahene on The Fight for Reparative Justice

On this episode of The Ryles Report, Richard Ryles sits down with Professor Bernadette Atuahene, a property law professor, community organizer, and scholar whose work focuses on land stolen from Black people. Professor Atuahene is the author of Plunder: How Public Finance Became Public Theft, as well as We Want What’s Ours: Learning from South Africa’s Land Restitution Program. Her research has taken her from South Africa’s post-apartheid land restitution efforts to Detroit, where she uncovered widespread, unconstitutional property tax assessments that devastated Black homeowners and contributed to mass tax foreclosures.  Together, Richard and Professor Atuahene discuss how racist policies—not just individual prejudice—shape housing, wealth, and opportunity in America. They explore Detroit’s property tax foreclosure crisis, the impact of redlining, racial covenants, urban renewal, blockbusting, appraisal bias, heirs’ property, and the racial wealth gap. Professor Atuahene also explains her work with the Coalition for Property Tax Justice and the Dignity Restoration Project, which seeks compensation for Detroit residents harmed by illegally inflated property taxes. The conversation also turns to South Africa, land theft, reparations, and what communities can do to challenge unjust tax systems and protect Black homeownership. Listen in, learn something new, and join the conversation online. Use the hashtag #TheRylesReport to share your thoughts on social media.

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