Most scholars would date the origins of neoliberalism to the 1970s, when a range of crises gave rise to new forms of market-oriented governance.
But Brent Cebul, our guest on this month's episode, argues that liberalism’s sharp turn towards neoliberalism wasn’t so sharp after all. In fact, as early as the New Deal, liberals tried to realize their policy goals through market means. And officials in Washington worked hand-in-hand with otherwise conservative business and municipal elites on those development programs. Throughout the entirety of the long twentieth century, liberals have bound their visions of progress to the local needs of capital. In the process, they’ve ended up entrenching the very inequalities that they had set out to solve in the first place.
Cheryl Narumi Naruse on Singapore, Postcolonial Capitalism, and Becoming Global Asia
Ben Waterhouse on the Dream and Reality of Self Employment
Tim Keogh on Suburban Poverty and the Roots of Postwar Inequality
Premilla Nadasen on the Care Economy and the Potential for Radical Care
Hannah Forsyth on the Rise and Fall of the Professional Class in the Anglophone World
Bart Elmore on Southern Companies Remaking our Economy and the Planet
Mark Erlich on the Way We Build and Restoring Dignity to Construction Work
Chelsea Schields on Oil, Intimacy, and the Offshore
Joan Flores-Villalobos on How Black Women's Labor Made the Panama Canal
Christy Thornton on Mexico, Development, and Governing the Global Economy
Special Episode on the Military and the Market
Allan Lumba on Monetary Authorities in the American Colonial Philippines
Chad Pearson on Klansmen, Employer Vigilantes, and Labor Suppression in the Long Nineteenth Century
Ghassan Moazzin on Foreign Banks and the Making of Modern China
Claire Dunning on Nonprofit Neighborhoods and Urban Inequality
Mircea Raianu on Tata and Global Capitalism in India
Holger Droessler on Coconut Colonialism, Labor, and Globalization in Samoa
Keith Wailoo on Racial Marketing and the Rise of Menthol Cigarettes
Jason Resnikoff on the Automation Discourse and the Meaning of Work
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