an immersive atlas of justice, memory and possibility
what if justice wasn’t a dream but a direction?
The Hope Gap XR is a civic infrastructure platform designed to restore belief in reparative, transformative, and democratic futures.
Operating across geographies and issue areas, we produce mixed-modal experiences that integrate immersive storytelling, somatic practices, and the latest research in brain health to strengthen our collective imagination.
We ground in a core theory: our capacity to imagine just futures is constrained not by a lack of empathy but by the architectures of information—who controls it, how it circulates, and whose stories are deemed credible.
When histories are rendered invisible, inaccessible, or illegible, imagination narrows.
We claim expansion.
The Hope Gap XR builds on existing research and public discourse across the U.S. reparations movement, as well as in psychology, education, economics, and public health worldwide. These bodies of work inform the experience, translating data and story into an immersive environment that invites reflection, dialogue, and generative thinking.
As a work-in-progress, we produce experiences as support becomes available.
If interested in hosting an exhibition at your museum, team retreat, conference, or other convening, contact us.
For more on the stories and scholars that inform this work, see our intellectual lineage here.
“isn’t the foundation of activism faith in what could be?"
- anana curtis
the hope gap xr premieres in oxford, uk
In July 2025, The Hope Gap XR work-in-progress premiered during the Atlantic Institute’s Global Convening, held at Oxford University in the United Kingdom. This experience tested concepts of immersion as empathy, storytelling at scale, and embodiment of hope.
proof of concept: windows of opportunity
“Windows of Opportunity” is a mobile phone-powered, augmented reality (AR) experience inspired by Linda Bilmes and Cornell William Brooks’ research on “Normalizing Reparations.” Set to a soundscape of policies that set precedents for reparations, the experience visualizes key symbols within Evanston, Illinois’ reparations movement — the first municipally-funded reparations policy in the United States.
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currents of repair, channels of progress