
New Books Network Kimberley Johnson, "Dark Concrete: Black Power Urbanism and the American Metropolis" (Cornell UP, 2025)
Jan 25, 2026
Kimberley Johnson, a political scientist who studies urban politics, discusses Black Power Urbanism and its local roots. She traces its rise in Newark, East Palo Alto, Oakland, and East Orange. The conversation focuses on housing, education, and policing. Johnson highlights how community control and local strategies reshaped urban governance and left lasting legacies.
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Black Power Urbanism Defined
- Black Power Urbanism was a distinct political order (c.1963–1980) that sought to restructure city governance, space, and policy to secure Black community survival and dignity.
- It centered housing, education, and policing with priorities like community control, use value over exchange value, and collective care.
Local Roots, Varied Forms
- The movement developed through local insurgencies rather than a single national blueprint, shaped by urban renewal and rebellions.
- Local conditions produced diverse Black Power Urbanisms that shared similar goals but different practices.
Expand Your Archive Sources
- Use alternative archives—movement publications, Black newspapers, oral histories, art, and music—to reconstruct grassroots political projects.
- These sources reveal ideology and governing practice that elite administrative records often miss.

