The Color of Law

The Color of Law

by

Richard Rothstein

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The practice of denying services (especially home financing) to all residents of certain, typically African American neighborhoods. This started during the New Deal, when a government lender called the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation color-coded neighborhoods and labeled all African American areas red (the worst category), regardless of their actual socioeconomic status. Redlining was perpetuated throughout the 20th century, primarily through restrictions by the Federal Housing Administration and Veterans Administration, which refused to insure mortgages for nonwhite families, but also by banks, restrictive covenants, and the variety of other measures Rothstein discusses from Chapters Two through Ten.

Redlining Quotes in The Color of Law

The The Color of Law quotes below are all either spoken by Redlining or refer to Redlining. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
De Jure vs. De Facto Segregation Theme Icon
).
Preface Quotes

De facto segregation, we tell ourselves, has various causes. When African Americans moved into a neighborhood like Ferguson, a few racially prejudiced white families decided to leave, and then as the number of black families grew, the neighborhood deteriorated, and “white flight” followed. Real estate agents steered whites away from black neighborhoods, and blacks away from white ones. Banks discriminated with “redlining,” refusing to give mortgages to African Americans or extracting unusually severe terms from them with subprime loans. African Americans haven’t generally gotten the educations that would enable them to earn sufficient incomes to live in white suburbs, and, as a result, many remain concentrated in urban neighborhoods. Besides, black families prefer to live with one another.

All this has some truth, but it remains a small part of the truth, submerged by a far more important one: until the last quarter of the twentieth century, racially explicit policies of federal, state, and local governments defined where whites and African Americans should live. […] Segregation by intentional government action is not de facto. Rather, it is what courts call de jure: segregation by law and public policy.

Related Characters: Richard Rothstein (speaker)
Page Number: vii-viii
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

The frequent existence of polluting industry and toxic waste plants in African American communities, along with subdivided homes and rooming houses, contributed to giving African Americans the image of slum dwellers in the eyes of whites who lived in neighborhoods where integration might be a possibility. This, in turn, contributed to white flight when African Americans attempted to move to suburbs.

Zoning thus had two faces. One face, developed in part to evade a prohibition on racially explicit zoning, attempted to keep African Americans out of white neighborhoods by making it difficult for lower-income families, large numbers of whom were African Americans, to live in expensive white neighborhoods. The other attempted to protect white neighborhoods from deterioration by ensuring that few industrial or environmentally unsafe businesses could locate in them. Prohibited in this fashion, polluting industry had no option but to locate near African American residences. The first contributed to creation of exclusive white suburbs, the second to creation of urban African American slums.

Related Characters: Richard Rothstein (speaker)
Page Number: 56-7
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

The HOLC created color-coded maps of every metropolitan area in the nation, with the safest neighborhoods colored green and the riskiest colored red. A neighborhood earned a red color if African Americans lived in it, even if it was a solid middle-class neighborhood of single-family homes.

Related Characters: Richard Rothstein (speaker), Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Related Symbols: Homeownership
Page Number: 64
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

The full cycle went like this: when a neighborhood first integrated, property values increased because of African Americans’ need to pay higher prices for homes than whites. But then property values fell once speculators had panicked enough white homeowners into selling at deep discounts.
Falling sale prices in neighborhoods where blockbusters created white panic was deemed as proof by the FHA that property values would decline if African Americans moved in. But if the agency had not adopted a discriminatory and unconstitutional racial policy, African Americans would have been able, like whites, to locate throughout metropolitan areas rather than attempting to establish presence in only a few blockbusted communities, and speculators would not have been able to prey on white fears that their neighborhoods would soon turn from all white to all black.

Related Characters: Richard Rothstein (speaker)
Related Symbols: Homeownership
Page Number: 96
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

The consequences of racially targeted subprime lending continue to accumulate. As the housing bubble collapsed, African American homeownership rates fell much more than white rates. Families no longer qualify for conventional mortgages if they previously defaulted when they were unable to make exorbitant loan payments; for these families, the contract buying system of the 1960s is now making its return. Some of the same firms that exploited African Americans in the subprime crisis are now reselling foreclosed properties to low- and moderate-income households at high interest rates, with high down payments, with no equity accumulated until the contract period has ended, and with eviction possible after a single missed payment.

Related Characters: Richard Rothstein (speaker)
Related Symbols: Homeownership
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

The Fair Housing Act of 1968 prohibited future discrimination, but it was not primarily discrimination (although this still contributed) that kept African Americans out of most white suburbs after the law was passed. It was primarily unaffordability. The right that was unconstitutionally denied to African Americans in the late 1940s cannot be restored by passing a Fair Housing law that tells their descendants they can now buy homes in the suburbs, if only they can afford it. The advantage that FHA and VA loans gave the white lower-middle class in the 1940s and ‘50s has become permanent.

Related Characters: Richard Rothstein (speaker)
Related Symbols: Homeownership
Page Number: 183
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

“In the North, too, African Americans faced segregation and discrimination. Even where there were no explicit laws, de facto segregation, or segregation by unwritten custom or tradition, was a fact of life. African Americans in the North were denied housing in many neighborhoods.”

[…]

With very rare exceptions, textbook after textbook adopts the same mythology. If middle and high school students are being taught a false history, is it any wonder that they come to believe that African Americans are segregated only because they don’t want to marry or because they prefer to live only among themselves? Is it any wonder that they grow up inclined to think that programs to ameliorate ghetto conditions are simply undeserved handouts?

Related Characters: Richard Rothstein (speaker)
Page Number: 200
Explanation and Analysis:
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Redlining Term Timeline in The Color of Law

The timeline below shows where the term Redlining appears in The Color of Law. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Preface
De Jure vs. De Facto Segregation Theme Icon
Racism, Profit, and Political Gain Theme Icon
...leave a neighborhood when black families move in, that racist real estate agents and bank redlining help make neighborhoods more and more homogeneous, and that African American people’s general lack of... (full context)
Chapter 6: White Flight
De Jure vs. De Facto Segregation Theme Icon
Segregation and the Preservation of Racial Caste Theme Icon
In Part III, Rothstein explains how, beyond redlining, this contract sale system used by blockbusters also drove black neighborhoods to deteriorate. A historian... (full context)
Chapter 7: IRS Support and Compliant Regulators
De Jure vs. De Facto Segregation Theme Icon
Racism, Profit, and Political Gain Theme Icon
...and thrift institutions with government insurance and oversight also “contributed to de jure segregation” through redlining. These institutions “refuse[d] service to African Americans only because […] regulators chose to allow it.”... (full context)
De Jure vs. De Facto Segregation Theme Icon
Segregation and the Preservation of Racial Caste Theme Icon
Racism, Profit, and Political Gain Theme Icon
Separation of Powers, Legal Activism, and Minority Rights Theme Icon
...to discriminate against African American people “into the twenty-first century.” Now, regulators support the “reverse redlining” that helped cause the 2008 economic collapse. Banks pressured African American people into predatory subprime... (full context)
De Jure vs. De Facto Segregation Theme Icon
Segregation and the Preservation of Racial Caste Theme Icon
...a single missed payment.” Rothstein concludes that “regulators shared responsibility [with banks] for [the] reverse redlining of African American communities” in the 1990s and 2000s, and thereby shirked their constitutional responsibilities. (full context)