Just got back from overseas and @davidgriscom.bsky.social brilliant new book, The Myth of Red Texas, was here waiting for me.
Congrats, David, can’t wait to read it!
Posts by Shawn Fremstad
NLRB General Counsel sent a memo to staff stating that the NLRB should not go after employers simply because their labor policies are illegal, as long as they are not actually enforced.
So it's fine to threaten workers, as long as you don't carry out the threats.
www.nlrb.gov/news-outreac...
A lot of Dems supported Opportunity Zones but:
-84% of job gains offset by ⬇️ in low-income communities & evidence of even larger negative spillover
-gains likely benefited more-advantaged new residents not original ones
-⬆️ in white pop share; ⬇️ in Hispanic share
www.nber.org/digest/20260...
Leading Edge Fellowships place recent humanities PhDs with nonprofit organizations committed to promoting justice and equity in their communities. Recent PhDs from across all fields of the humanities and interpretive social sciences are encouraged to apply for this fellowship. ACLS will hold two webinars for applicants to the 2026 ACLS Leading Edge Fellowship, offering real-time feedback on questions about eligibility, the online application, and the fellowship review and selection process. Please register for February 24 or March 4. Fellowship Details Stipend: For remote positions, $70,000 in year one, and $72,000 in year two; for in-person positions, $72,000 in year one, and $74,000 in year two. All fellows will have access to health insurance and professional development funding. Relocation: Up to $5,000 in relocation funds for fellows who relocate for in-person positions. Tenure: 24 months beginning in September 2026. Applications will be accepted only through the ACLS Online Fellowship Application system. Please do not contact any of the organizations directly. Application deadline: March 11, 2026, 9:00 PM EDT.
Recent Humanities PhD grad? Heard about this opportunity for you from @equitablegrowth.bsky.social
www.acls.org/competitions...
Do you know how bad you have to fuck up to radicalize St. Cloud?
Today, a call to join the next era of LPE: a democratic, independent, member-led organization that will serve as a home for a broad array of LPE work.
extremely sad news that Asad Haider has passed away. i didn't know him personally but it'd be impossible to overstate how important his writing and editing in Viewpoint was to my trajectory. as I said last night, we are losing too many comrades.
What is the care economy? It is $4b/day in developmental care, $12b/day in activities that support daily living, and another $4b/day on time caring for a loved ones' health. The equivalent of $20 billion/day of effort is invested in caregiving in the U.S. Check out the details.👇👇👇 #thecareboard
Finally, the research I review uses pre-pandemic data. Crime and incarceration rates have recently decreased, and drug arrests have fallen sharply since 2019, but this may not hold in the current political environment. /FIN.
All that said, people racialized as Black remain disproportionately incarcerated compared to their population share, and the increasing significance of class doesn't negate the continued importance of ethnoracial disparities and racial domination. 9/
... and proposing that rising violent crime rates, economic restructuring, urban decline, and an incomplete social state contributed to the punitive turn in crime policy. 8/ catalyst-journal.com/2019/12/the-...
See also Clegg & Usmani (2019), disputing that the carceral system functions mainly as a race-based social control mechanism ... 7/ catalyst-journal.com/2019/12/the-...
Clegg and Usmani (2024) found that adverse local labor market shocks due to increased Chinese exports led to significant increases in total incarceration rates for both Black and White people. 6/ onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/... 6/
Muller and Roehrkasse (2022) observe that Black-White inequality in the prison admission rate peaked in 2000 and then declined, while class inequality in admission, using education as a proxy, has surged for both groups. 5/ escholarship.org/content/qt74...
Light (2021) finds that the average sentencing difference between Black and White defendants in US federal courts narrowed considerably between 2009 and 2018, especially for drug offenses. 4/ academic.oup.com/sf/article-a...
Robey, Massoglia, and Light (2023) highlight a substantial 44 percent decrease in the risk of incarceration for Black men between 1999 and 2019, with the fastest decline among young Black men. 3/ sociology.wisc.edu/2023/07/12/a...
Beckett and Brydolf-Horwitz (2020) document significant declines in drug arrests and imprisonment for Black individuals between 2007 and 2018, attributing this partly to increased support for drug policy reform in urban areas. 2/ lsj.washington.edu/sites/lsj/fi...
This is a new piece from me on the increasing significance of class in arrests and incarceration. 1/ cepr.net/publications...
“what do you do when the pursuit of middle-range theory feels no more useful than trying to determine how many angels can fit on the head of a pin? My own response has been to zoom out, to shift my research toward the big political economy questions: …” lpeproject.org/blog/in-this...
harpers.org/archive/2025...
MPP (marriage promotion and preferences) is the new DEI.
"Grossman and Hopkins note that today there are more nonprofit employees in the US than there are manufacturing workers, around three million as of 2023." jacobin.com/2024/11/libe...
Catalyst journal is publishing interesting stuff on class, including sociologist Dylan Riley's piece on Bourdieu's Class Theory ... catalyst-journal.com/2017/11/bour...
I also found Will Atkinson's book Class, from
@politybooks.bsky.social Key Concepts series, very helpful as an overview, especially on Bourdieu's approach to class. www.politybooks.com/bookdetail?b...
Erik Olin Wright's "Understanding Class" (both the 2009 New Left Review piece and the 2015 collection with the same title) is notable for bringing together three of the main approaches (stratification, Weberian, and Marxist) to class. See also his lecture here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kmii...
Resistance 1.0 didn't fail because it was too reflexively anti-Trump.
Resistance 1.0 did not build sustainable power because it was too formalistic. It was focused on what was aberrant and abhorrent about Trump, rather than the impact of his corruption and incompetence on actual people.
"Soviet computing was–ironically–severely undermined by a lack of cohesive, collectivist planning...whereas electronics development in Massachusetts and California was lavishly state-funded, leisurely and cooperative. The Bulgarians were fully aware of this..." newleftreview.org/sidecar/post...
Such a telling and important figure illustrating how childcare costs impact inequality!
After not showing up to votes since Thanksgiving, Senator Sinema finally showed up today only to vote against a nominee she had voted to confirm for the same position just four years ago.
Why show up now? Sinema is currently auditioning for the role of corporate sell-out