Top Story
BHP Book + Film Club: Reclaiming Your Community (Spring 2022)
Spring 2022 BHP Book + Film Club Title
ULI’s Building Healthy Places Book Club is designed to spark thought and conversation around health, social equity, and real estate.
Our Winter 2022 selection is The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America. Author Richard Rothstein refutes the common notion that housing segregation in the United States is the result of millions of individual private choices and instead proves with exacting precision and fascinating insight how it is the byproduct of a century of explicit racist government policies at the local, state, and federal levels. The impact has been devastating, denying generations of African Americans the constitutional right to live where they wanted, the right to raise and school their children where they thought best, and the opportunity that whites were afforded to build generational wealth through home ownership.
Participation is free and requires registration. All registered participants receive a suggested reading schedule, weekly email thought prompts, and a link to attend virtual meetups.
The Color of Law is the second in a series of curated selections designed to support the work of ULI’s District Council Partnerships for Health Equity Project.
The Building Healthy Places Book Club is generously supported by ULI Foundation Governor Randall Lewis.
READ WITH US
SPEAKERS (additional speakers may be announced)
Richard Rothstein, Author
Richard Rothstein is a Distinguished Fellow of the Economic Policy Institute and a fellow of the Thurgood Marshall Institute of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and of the Haas Institute at the University of California (Berkeley). In addition to The Color of Law, he is the author of numerous titles at the intersection of race, social equity and public education.
Don’t have an account? Sign up for a ULI guest account.