Racism in the Neoliberal Era explains how simple racial binaries like black/white are no longer sufficient to explain the persistence of racism, capitalism, and elite white power. The neoliberal era features the largest Black middle class in US history and extreme racial marginalization. Hohle focuses on how the origins and expansion of neoliberalism depended on a racial language of white-private/black public, operating as a web of racial meanings that connect social groups with economic policy, geography, and police brutality. When America was racially segregated, elites consented to political pressure to develop and fund white-public institutions. The Black civil rights movement eliminated legal barriers that prevented racial integration. The elite white response to Black civic inclusion was to deregulate the Voting Rights Act and banking policy giving themselves tax cuts and implementing austerity measures on government programs to aid the poor, privatizing neighborhoods, schools, and social welfare, creating markets around poverty. Citizenship was recast as a privilege instead of a right. Neoliberalism is the result of an elite white meta strategy to maintain political and economic power.
This new edition is thoroughly revised and updated to take account of the further history and debates over neoliberalism in the Trump and Biden eras, and the significant social and political discussions around race and racism, policing, housing, health care, and citizenship as they interconnect with the American neoliberal economic and political system. The new edition will be a vital textbook for students, instructors, and researchers in sociology, politics, race, and economics.
Racism in the Neoliberal Era explains how simple racial binaries like black/white are no longer sufficient to explain the persistence of racism, capitalism, and elite white power. This new edition is thoroughly revised and updated to take account of the further history and debates over neoliberalism in the Trump and Biden eras.
Introduction: The Tricks are New, but the Bag is the Same
1. Citizenship
and Systemic Racism
2. Piecemeal Black Disenfranchisement: Deregulation and
the Voting Rights Act
3. Preserving the White Economy at Any Cost
4. Social
Welfare and the Segregated Welfare State
5. Neoliberal Urbanization:
Racializing Spaces and Places
6. Racism and the Neoliberal Crisis in American
Education
7. White-Private Violence: Police Brutality and Mass Incarceration
8. Looking Beyond Neoliberalism: Project 2025 and the Green New Deal
Randolph Hohle is Professor of Sociology at Fredonia, SUNY. His previous books include The American Housing Question: Racism, Urban Citizenship, and the Privilege of Mobility (2022), Race and the Origins of Neoliberalism (Routledge, 2015), Black Citizenship and Authenticity in the Civil Rights Movement (Routledge, 2013), and The New Urban Sociology, 6e (Routledge, 2019).