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January 22, 2026 at 6.00pm – 7.30pm

Haymarket House and Online

Engineered Conflict: Structural Violence and the Future of Black Life in Chicago

Join David Omotoso Stovall and Tara Betts as the discuss Stovall's latest book Engineered Conflict: Structural Violence and the Future of Black Life in Chicago.

Haymarket House and Online

800 W Buena Ave
Chicago, IL 60613 United States

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Marginalized communities often become understandably preoccupied with a city’s structured attempt to deem them disposable, making it difficult to see people experiencing the same suffering as potential comrades in struggle. Enemies are manufactured as the result of continued displacement, hyper-segregation, and dispossession. Under these impossible circumstances people are often quicker to punch each other before they identify the enemy as white supremacy and capitalism, creating a society where conflict is engineered.

Examining the long fight of Black people in Chicago to claim their humanity and thrive in a city while facing school closings, the destruction of public housing and oppressive law enforcement, Stovall argues that marginalized communities face unique structural challenges while being blamed for interpersonal conflict and labeled “violent” and deemed disposable. With a novel approach to the question of how state-sanctioned violence and abandonment impacts low-income communities, Engineered Conflict uses examples from Chicago’s recent history to shed light on the politics of disposability through housing instability, criminalization, and school closures. Looking at all three phenomena together allows readers to see how state policies designate some neighborhoods as unviable, where disinvestment furthers a rationale to contain members of these communities.

Looking at the many ways Black communities have resisted state violence and the work of local organizations to address marginalization, Engineered Conflict calls for a powerful movement against the displacement, disinvestment, and disposability of Chicago’s Black population.

**We ask all attendees wear masks in the event space during the program for the health and well-being of the speakers and other guests.**

Speakers:

David Omotoso Stovall is a professor in the Department of Black Studies and Criminology, Law & Justice at the University of Illinois at Chicago and the author of Born Out of Struggle: Critical Race Theory, School Creation and the Politics of Interruption.

Tara Betts is the author of Refuse to DisappearBreak the Habit, and Arc & Hue. She is a professor in the Peace, Conflict Studies, and Social Justice program at DePaul University and part of the faculty at the Solstice MFA program at Lasell University. Her poems have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies, including This is the Honey, Choice Words, and The Overturning. Her short stories and essays have also appeared in numerous publications, including Octavia's BroodRed Line: Chicago Horror StoriesThe Whiskey of Our Discontent, and The Breakbeat Poets.

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This event is sponsored by Haymarket BooksW.E.B. Du Bois Movement School, and Center for Political Education. While all of our events are freely available, we ask that those who are able make a solidarity donation in support of our important publishing and programming work.