How racial bias shaped Dallas highways – new book by SMU student uncovers forgotten history
By SMU
Sep 10, 2021
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SMU graduate student publishes book about forgotten history, seeks infrastructure change

 

Dallas, Texas (SMU) – For SMU engineering graduate student Collin Yarbrough, a classroom assignment to evaluate the design of Dallas’ Central Expressway resulted in a recently published book about the long-forgotten history of Dallas’ racist past buried beneath the city’s freeways.

 

“I saw the same pattern of injustice over and over,” Yarbrough says. “From Tenth Street to Fair Park to Deep Ellum, the history of Dallas highways is part of a tangled web of infrastructure, policy and race.”

 

Among his findings:

 

 

 

 

The Dallas native knew nothing about the racial history buried under the highways he traveled every day until he conducted research for his paper, which led to his book, Paved a Way, Infrastructure, Policy and Racism in an American City (New Degree Press, 2021).

 

Yarbrough’s story is still unfolding. A former pipeline engineer for a utility company, he returned to college in 2019, preparing for a career change. First, he enrolled at SMU’s Perkins School of Theology, then returned to his engineering roots to take courses toward SMU Lyle School of Engineering’s Master of Art in Sustainability and Development degree.

 

Writing a paper on Central Expressway changed his life, Yarbrough says. He begins work in the fall on a Ph.D. in civil engineering at SMU, where he will specialize in transportation, economic geography and urban economics.

 

“Infrastructure is symptomatic of a larger ill – racism,” he says. “I’d like to seek ways to prevent infrastructure from promoting racism again.”