
New Books in Economics Lars Cornelissen, "Neoliberalism and Race" (Stanford UP, 2025)
Nov 11, 2025
Lars Cornelissen, a historian specializing in neoliberalism, presents his provocative ideas from his upcoming book on race and neoliberal thought. He explores how racial constructs have always underpinned neoliberal ideology, often overlooked in scholarship. Cornelissen critiques key figures like Mises and Hayek, revealing their complex relationships with race and development theories. He also discusses how these ideas influence contemporary thought and urges critics to prioritize race in anti-neoliberal politics, challenging listeners to rethink familiar narratives.
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Neoliberalism Is A Broad, Racialized Tradition
- Neoliberalism is a long-running intellectual tradition that began in the interwar period and covers economics, culture, and world history.
- Lars Cornelissen argues race is constitutive to neoliberal thought, not an accidental add-on.
Scholars Missed Neoliberalism's Racial Scope
- Early scholarship on neoliberalism focused narrowly on economic policy and missed culture and race.
- Cornelissen says mature neoliberalism needed subtler analyses of racism because explicit racial language waned after WWII.
Different Thinkers, Same Civilizational Hierarchy
- Mises and Hayek differed: Mises incorporated biological race into world history while Hayek largely ignored race.
- Both nonetheless placed Western liberal culture at the apex of a civilizational spectrum.





