
The Class-to-Race Cascade
Author(s) -
Jonathan McCombs
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
critical romani studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2630-855X
pISSN - 2560-3019
DOI - 10.29098/crs.v1i2.6
Subject(s) - underclass , sociology , race (biology) , gender studies , racism , class (philosophy) , class analysis , political science , politics , law , anthropology , epistemology , philosophy
This paper explores neoliberal discourse as a racial discourse in relation to how Roma are conceived by academics and policymakers. I develop the concept of the class-to-race cascade as a way to describe the phenomenon, whereby the marginalization of racialized minorities is attributed entirely to their classposition. The cascade flows as follows: neoliberal policies slash benefits to low-income people, low-income people are disproportionately racially marginalized, thus neoliberal policies affect different racialized minorities, perpetuating racism. I trace the lineage of the class-to-race cascade to the concept of the“underclass” as it was developed in the U.S. particularly through the work of William Julius Wilson after the neoliberal turn. I then critique the work of Iván Szelényi and János Ladányi who adapted the “underclass” thesis to Roma, using the class-to-race cascade. Finally, I apply the concept to urban policy discourse inBudapest’s Eighth District, where a large Roma community has lived for nearly a century. I show in this paper that the class-torace cascade is a prominent discursive feature of both policy and academic concepts of Roma.