
New Books Network Lars Cornelissen, "Neoliberalism and Race" (Stanford UP, 2025)
Nov 11, 2025
Lars Cornelissen, a historian specializing in neoliberalism, discusses his groundbreaking book, Neoliberalism and Race. He reveals how race serves as a central element of neoliberal ideology, examining overlooked racial constructs in theories from figures like Mises and Hayek. Cornelissen critiques the depiction of racial dynamics in developmental policies and highlights the troubling ties between neoliberal think tanks and eugenics. He emphasizes the need for anti-neoliberal movements to prioritize racial justice, asserting that race and neoliberalism are fundamentally intertwined.
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Neoliberalism's Broader Intellectual Reach
- Neoliberalism emerged between the world wars as a revived classical liberal tradition that shaped economics, politics, and culture.
- Lars Cornelissen argues race is constitutive to neoliberal thought and not an accidental add-on.
Why Race Was Overlooked
- Scholarship focused on economic mechanics missed neoliberalism's cultural and racial dimensions for decades.
- Cornelissen emphasizes subtle, non-biological forms of racism embedded in neoliberal discourse.
Civilization As A Racial Spectrum
- Mises held an explicit biological theory of race while Hayek largely ignored race but both framed civilization hierarchically.
- Both tied 'high civilization' to European liberal values, producing a racialized civilizational narrative.







