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New Dawn

New Dawn

By New Dawn

Michael C. Dawson, founder and former Director of the Center for the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture and is the John D. MacArthur Professor of Political Science and the College at the University of Chicago, is the host of this Race and Capitalism Project-initiated podcast series, New Dawn. He invites guests to discuss their research related to race and capitalism.

Many episodes have generously been supported by Scholarly Borderlands and Social Science Research Council.
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Decolonizing Discourse about Africa: An Anti-Imperialist Framework

New DawnMay 04, 2021

00:00
58:02
Socialism and Empire: Labor, Migration, and Racial Politics

Socialism and Empire: Labor, Migration, and Racial Politics

Inés Valdez, Associate Professor of Political Science at The Ohio State University, joins the New Dawn Podcast and discusses the role of labor and migration as a form of racial politics. As a critical race and feminist theorist, Valdez's research agenda has engaged issues of migration, transnationalism, empire, and racial capitalism. Her first book, Transnational Cosmopolitanism: Kant, Du Bois, and Justice as a Political Craft, was published by Cambridge and makes the case that cosmopolitanism must be transnational. Valdez's numerous articles have appeared in the American Political Science Review, Citizenship Studies, Perspectives on Politics, Politics, Groups, and Identities, Political Research Quarterly, Political Theory, and Theory & Event. (This episode was originally recorded in June 2021.)

May 31, 202242:38
Celebrating Charles W. Mills, 1951-2021 | Retheorizing (Racial) Justice
Sep 28, 202155:53
Decolonizing Discourse about Africa: An Anti-Imperialist Framework

Decolonizing Discourse about Africa: An Anti-Imperialist Framework

In this episode of New Dawn, Michael C. Dawson along with special guest host, Charisse Burden Stelly, invite Dr. Takiyah Harper-Shipman, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Assistant Professor of Africana Studies at Davidson College. Professor Harper-Shipman is particularly interested in the ways in which discourse structures political economies of development, human rights, and-more recently-gender. Her first book, Rethinking Ownership of Development in Africa (Routledge), examined how development stakeholders in Burkina Faso and Kenya negotiate "owning development" in their local contexts. Professor Harper-Shipman is currently at work on another project that explores legacies of population control in human rights approaches to family planning.

May 04, 202158:02
A Conversation w/ Charisse Burden-Stelly & Boots Riley - Part II

A Conversation w/ Charisse Burden-Stelly & Boots Riley - Part II

In this special two-part series, the Race & Capitalism's Post-Graduate Fellow, Charisse Burden-Stelly, is in conversation with writer, rapper, director, and filmmaker, Boots Riley. Part II focuses on the new Biden administration, Riley's new show, "I'm a Virgo," being released by Amazon, and the future of labor organizing in the U.S. and around the world. 

Jan 27, 202101:12:12
A Conversation w/ Charisse Burden-Stelly & Boots Riley - Part I

A Conversation w/ Charisse Burden-Stelly & Boots Riley - Part I

In this special two-part series, the Race & Capitalism's Post-Graduate Fellow, Charisse Burden-Stelly, is in conversation with writer, rapper, director, and filmmaker, Boots Riley. Part I was produced and sponsored by the Claudia Jones School for Political Education. 

Jan 27, 202101:35:05
Neoliberalism and Gentrification in a Chocolate City

Neoliberalism and Gentrification in a Chocolate City

In this episode of New Dawn, Michael Dawson invites Brandi Thompson Summers to the show. Summers is an Assistant Professor of Geography and Global Metropolitan Studies at the UC Berkeley. She received her Ph.D. in Sociology from UC Santa Cruz. Her research engages theoretical themes that cut across multiple domains of social life. Summers builds epistemological and methodological insights from cultural and urban geography, urban sociology, African American studies, and media studies by examining the cultural, political, and economic dynamics by which race and space are reimagined and reordered. Her first book, Black in Place: The Spatial Aesthetics of Race in a Post-Chocolate City (UNC Press), explores how aesthetics and race converge to locate or map Blackness in Washington, D.C. Summers has published several articles and essays in both academic and popular publications, including the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, New York Times, Boston Globe, and The Funambulist.

Jan 22, 202147:46
Normalizing Foreclosure: Land, Credit, and Early Colonial Experiments

Normalizing Foreclosure: Land, Credit, and Early Colonial Experiments

K-Sue Park joins Michael Dawson to launch Season 5 of New Dawn. Park is an Associate Professor of Law at Georgetown University. She has written extensively on foreclosure, land, dispossession, and displacement. Her publications have appeared in the Harvard Law Review, The History of the Present, Law & Social Inquiry, Law & Society Review, and the New York Times. (Due to some unavoidable technical issues, the beginning of the episode is a bit distorted. Thank you for your patience and for tuning in.)

Dec 16, 202046:47
Anti-Black Violence and the Ongoing Fight for Freedom
Jul 15, 202001:06:35
Why Du Bois Still Matters
Jul 09, 202049:05
COVID-19 and Racial Inequities: Unpacking the Anti-Black Response

COVID-19 and Racial Inequities: Unpacking the Anti-Black Response

This episode is a recording of a conversation between Michael Dawson, Rhea Boyd, Aresha Martinez-Cardoso, and Brandi Summers during an event titled "COVID-19 and Racial Inequities: Unpacking the Anti-Black Response," on June 25, 2020.

Rhea Boyd, MD, MPH, FAAP works clinically at the Palo Alto Medical Foundation and teaches nationally on the relationship between structural racism, inequity and health, and has a decade of experience advancing community-based advocacy. She leads efforts to characterize and address the child and public health impacts of harmful policing practices and policies. She serves as the Chief Medical Officer of San Diego 211, working with navigators to address social needs of San Diegans impacted by chronic illness and poverty. And she is the Director of Equity and Justice for The California Children's Trust, an initiative to advance mental health access to children and youth across California.

Aresha Martinez-Cardoso, PhD is a public health researcher and Provost's Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Chicago. Her research integrates theoretical perspectives from the social sciences with epidemiological methods in public health to examine how social inequality in the US shapes population health, with a particular focus on the health of racial/ethnic groups and immigrants. The majority of her work focuses on how race, migration, and class intersect to shape the the health of US-born and immigrant Latinxs across the life-course.

Brandi Summers, PhD is an Assistant Professor of Geography and Global Metropolitan Studies (GMS) at the University of California, Berkeley. Her research examines urban cultural landscapes and the political and economic dynamics by which race and space are reimagined and reordered. She is also the author of Black in Place: The Spatial Aesthetics of Race in a Post-Chocolate City, which explores how aesthetics and race converge to locate or map blackness in Washington, D.C.

Suggested Links & Readings:

Learn more about Moms 4 Housing

Berwick, Don. “The Moral Determinants of Health.” JAMA. Published online June 12, 2020. doi:10.1001/jama.2020.11129

Laster Pirtle, Whitney N. “Racial Capitalism: A Fundamental Cause of Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic Inequities in the United States.” Health Education & Behavior, (April 2020). doi:10.1177/1090198120922942.

Sewell, Abigail A., Kevin A. Jefferson, Hedwig Lee. “Living under surveillance: Gender, psychological distress, and stop-question-and-frisk policing in New York City.” Social Science & Medicine, Volume 159, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.04.024.

Jun 30, 202057:44
Creating a Caring World
Feb 05, 202042:29
Capitalism in Legal Studies
Jan 22, 202046:59
King and His Fight for the Poor People's Campaign
Dec 18, 201948:13
The Poor Pay More
Nov 13, 201940:25
Housing and the Construction of the Black Urban Identity
Oct 21, 201954:16
Neoliberal Economics and Race
Sep 26, 201955:53
On the Resurgence of Nationalism
Sep 18, 201901:01:55
Settler Colonialism in the Nuclear Age

Settler Colonialism in the Nuclear Age

Iyko Day, Associate Professor of English at Mount Holyoke College, joins Michael Dawson to discuss her research on the logics of settler colonialism and waste landing, in addition to her takeaway from the 2019 Racial Capitalism Conference held at UIC-Urbana Champagne. 

Note: The guest would like to clarify her comment on the Shepard/Byrd hate crime bill—it was accompanied by a $680 billion national defense budget, not an 8 billion dollar increase as she had stated in the recording.

May 14, 201944:57
The “Irreconcilables”: Reforming Tax Policy to Maintain Racial Inequality

The “Irreconcilables”: Reforming Tax Policy to Maintain Racial Inequality

 Julia Ott, an associate professor of history at the New School, joins Michael Dawson to discuss the relationship between capital gains tax policy and Jim Crow, white wealth, the 1937 Conservative Movement Manifesto and financialization, and much more in a stimulating conversation in this episode. 

Apr 19, 201951:59
Neoliberalism in Kenya's Schools

Neoliberalism in Kenya's Schools

Wandia Njoya, Senior Lecturer at Daystar University in Kenya, joins Michael Dawson for a conversation about neoliberalism and the education system in Kenya. She also discusses her interest in environmental imperialism and racial capitalism as a useful perspective in her analyses and politics. 

Mar 28, 201944:04
Global Markets, "the national economy," and the Licit Life of Capitalism

Global Markets, "the national economy," and the Licit Life of Capitalism

Professor Michael Dawson speaks with Hannah Appel (Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Los Angeles) about her research on US oil companies. They begin discussing Appel's recent essay "Race Makes Markets: Subcontracting in the Transnational Oil Industry," which recently appeared in SSRC's Items series, and converse about Pan-African banking. 

Jan 22, 201939:20
Dark Ghettos and the Articulation of Racial Capitalism

Dark Ghettos and the Articulation of Racial Capitalism

 Tommie Shelby, Caldwell Titcomb Professor of African and African American Studies and of Philosophy at Harvard University, joins host Michael Dawson to discuss Shelby’s book “Dark Ghettos: Injustice, Dissent, and Reform,” in a conversation moderated by Adom Getachew, Neubauer Family Assistant Professor of Political Science and the College at the University of Chicago. This conversation was part of a live discussion at the New School. 

Jan 09, 201946:41
Expropriation, Exploitation, and the Neoliberal Racial Order

Expropriation, Exploitation, and the Neoliberal Racial Order

In the first episode of Season 3, Nancy Fraser, Henry A. & Louise Loeb Professor of Political and Social Science at The New School, joins Michael Dawson in a moderated discussion on race, expropriation, and exploitation led by lawyer and doctoral student Mayra Cotta.
Nov 21, 201833:14
Colonialism and Wealth Extraction: Puerto Rico after Maria

Colonialism and Wealth Extraction: Puerto Rico after Maria

Due to the aftermath of Hurricane Maria that devasted Puerto Rico in 2017, Puerto Rican scholars were invited to continue their research agendas at the University of Chicago. Joining the New Dawn Podcast is Professor Evaluz Cotto Quijano, Associate Professor of Finance at the University of Puerto Rico-Mayagüez. Professor Quijano explains how U.S. financial institutions and creditors continue to identify and extract resources from Puerto Rico.
Aug 29, 201828:44
Affordable Housing in the age of Financialization

Affordable Housing in the age of Financialization

In the latest episode of New Dawn, Michael Dawson welcomes John Robinson, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. Robinson's work examines how macro-economic changes have redefined politics of race, poverty and neighborhood inequality within and around American cities.
Aug 07, 201845:30
Mestizaje, Skin Color, and Capitalist Development in Mexico

Mestizaje, Skin Color, and Capitalist Development in Mexico

On location in Mexico City, Mexico, Michael Dawson engages Federico Navarrete, Professor at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM) on understanding the intersection of race and capitalism in Mexico.
Mar 27, 201846:22
Black Liberation and the Crisis of Capital

Black Liberation and the Crisis of Capital

Abdul Alkalimat, Professor Emeritus of African-American Studies and Information Sciences, joins the New Dawn Podcast and discusses the role of black intellectuals and their relationships with liberation movements.
Feb 16, 201847:33
Histories of Racial Capitalism: Urban Renewal, Racial Segregation, and Redevelopment

Histories of Racial Capitalism: Urban Renewal, Racial Segregation, and Redevelopment

Destin Jenkins, Provost's Postdoctoral Fellow and Instructor and incoming Assistant Professor of U.S. History at the University of Chicago, joins the New Dawn Podcast to discuss the emergence of histories of racial capitalism. Jenkins insightfully examines the role of the state in the displacement of people of color and the accumulation and distribution of wealth in San Francisco.
Jan 05, 201845:27
The Public University: Abel Valenzuela on Public Responsibility, Labor, and Organizing

The Public University: Abel Valenzuela on Public Responsibility, Labor, and Organizing

On location at UCLA, Professor Abel Valenzuela joins the New Dawn Podcast to talk about the role of labor, organizing, and the public university more broadly during the current presidential administration.
Dec 19, 201735:56
Transnational Histories: Global Aspects to Racial Capitalism

Transnational Histories: Global Aspects to Racial Capitalism

Kicking off Season 2, Michael Dawson welcomes Ananya Roy, Professor of Urban Planning, Social Welfare and Geography and inaugural Director of The Institute on Inequality and Democracy at UCLA Luskin. Prof. Roy discusses her approaches to the study of Racial Capitalism by engaging Post-Colonial Feminism and building community at UCLA. She spearheaded the effort to organize a conference on Race and Capitalism with all of the centers focused on advancing the study of race, ethnicity, and social justice at UCLA.
Nov 10, 201741:35
Neoliberalism and Black Politics - Part II

Neoliberalism and Black Politics - Part II

Lester Spence, Associate Professor of Political Science and Africana Studies at Johns Hopkins University, joins the New Dawn Podcast and extends the conversation around using a neoliberal lens and the history of financialization to study black communities. (Note: Original image was from the Ferguson protests and mistakenly posted.)
Aug 21, 201747:35
Neoliberalism and/or Neocolonialism in Black Politics?

Neoliberalism and/or Neocolonialism in Black Politics?

Prof. Michael Dawson welcomes Nathan Connolly, Herbert Baxter Adams Associate Professor of History at Johns Hopkins University, to the New Dawn Podcast. In this episode, they discuss the value and utility of theoretically and pragmatically engaging concepts like neoliberalism, on one hand, and neocolonialism, on the other.
Aug 09, 201752:35
Flip'n the Script: Michael Dawson, Beyond Linked Fated, and the Roots to Racial Capitalism

Flip'n the Script: Michael Dawson, Beyond Linked Fated, and the Roots to Racial Capitalism

In this special episode, Prof. Megan Ming Francis, political scientist from the University of Washington, flips the script and engages Prof. Michael Dawson about his journey through activism and academia. Ranging from challenging institutions, returning to higher education, and where Dawson sees the state of the discipline since offering the Linked Fate measure and framework.
Jun 19, 201745:49
Reframing Salvadoran Modernity: Race, Power, and Neoliberalism

Reframing Salvadoran Modernity: Race, Power, and Neoliberalism

Professor Michael Dawson welcomes to the New Dawn podcast Dr. Raul Moreno Campos, Lecturer in Political Science at California State University - Channel Islands. Moreno Campos discusses the development of an authoritarian regime and the Civil War in El Salvador and its implications for global capitalism.
Jun 08, 201701:02:20
Bankers and Empire: The Caribbean, Capital, and Race

Bankers and Empire: The Caribbean, Capital, and Race

Peter Hudson, Assistant Professor of African American Studies at UCLA, discusses his new book, Bankers and Empire: How Wall Street Colonized the Caribbean, and uncovering a lost history of wealth in the Caribbean.
May 28, 201742:56
Trump's Mafia Capitalism and the Crisis in American Politics

Trump's Mafia Capitalism and the Crisis in American Politics

In this episode, Michael Dawson welcomes Prof. Kaushik S. Rajan, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Co-Director of 3CT at the University of Chicago. For Rajan, the current Trump administration resembles a form of mafia capitalism and he urges both parties to stop being complicit in the decline of American democracy.
May 22, 201742:27
The Rise of the Carceral State: Prisoner Organizing, Politicization, and Surplus Labor

The Rise of the Carceral State: Prisoner Organizing, Politicization, and Surplus Labor

In this episode, Michael Dawson talks with Toussaint Losier, Assistant Professor of Afro-American Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, about the role of prisoner organizing and its influence on local mobilizations and protests.
Mar 28, 201739:28
Racial Capitalism: Globalism, Empire, and War

Racial Capitalism: Globalism, Empire, and War

Michael Dawson meets with Nikhil Singh, Associate Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis at NYU and Adom Getachew, Neubauer Family Assistant Professor of Political Science and the College at the University of Chicago to discuss the role of colonization and empire in developing the connection between race and capitalism.
Mar 21, 201744:30
Displacement, Capital, and the International Bourgeoisie

Displacement, Capital, and the International Bourgeoisie

Professor Michael Dawson engages UC Berkeley Assistant Professor of African American studies, Tianna Paschel, about the parallels between rising populism in Colombia and Brazil and its relationship to domestic politics in the US.
Feb 21, 201739:15
Black History: Fighting Selective Amnesia About Race and Capitalism

Black History: Fighting Selective Amnesia About Race and Capitalism

Michael Dawson discusses the historical struggles between advancing social movements and funding activism with Assistant Professor Megan Ming Francis.
Jan 18, 201740:42
Dark Times & Black Workers

Dark Times & Black Workers

Michael Dawson discusses the state of black workers and unions with Dr. Steven Pitts, Associate Chair of the U.C. Berkeley Labor Center.
Jan 02, 201740:52
The Gentlemen from MIT

The Gentlemen from MIT

Michael Dawson, Director of the Center for the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture at the University of Chicago, in conversation with J. Phillip Thompson, Professor of Urban Planning, and Jason Jackson, Lecturer in the Department of Urban Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, covering the aftermath of the 2016 Presidential election and its relationship to race and capitalism.
Dec 03, 201653:22