Bringing an Inquisitive Mind to Inequality

A lifelong curiosity guides Sandy Darity鈥檚 influential work on the nation鈥檚 racial wealth gap

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Sandy Darity
Graphic by Zaire McPhearson, an instructor in the Duke Department of Art, Art History & Visual Studies.

Darity, who spent most of his adolescence in Massachusetts, recalls visiting his grandmother in Wilson, North Carolina, where railroad tracks divided Black and white neighborhoods, and his parents refused to patronize a movie theater that confined Black customers to the balcony.

Seeing economics as a way to understand inequality, Darity found most theories failed to fully explain why some populations build wealth, while others don鈥檛. Darity saw how systemic obstacles to building and sharing wealth left generations of Black Americans behind.

With current Federal Reserve data showing the average difference between white and Black household wealth at approximately $841,000, Darity proposes closing the gap by the federal government making reparations payments to Black Americans whose ancestors were enslaved in the United States.

Recently, reparations were discussed in primary debates prior to the 2020 presidential election. In 2020, Darity and Mullen published their award-winning book, , now in a second paperback edition.

At Duke, the Cook Center, which Darity founded, continues the conversation through research, collaboration and, since 2021, an Inequality Studies minor administered jointly with the Department of History. In 2022, Cook Center Director of Strategic Initiatives and Collaborations Gwendolyn Wright, Associate in Research Lucas Hubbard and Darity co-edited the book, , featuring research from Cook Center scholars.

鈥淲ith the timeliness of the issue and the skills that our scholars have, we felt we it was important for the center鈥檚 voice
to be expressed in the context of the pandemic,鈥 Darity said.

Through his work, and that of his colleagues, Darity keeps unearthing bold ideas, leaving more bread on the water.

This story is part of Working老牛影视's "Working Toward Racial Justice" series. Please send your ideas for this series through  or write working@duke.edu.