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Illiberal Reformers: Race, Eugenics, and American Economics in the Progressive Era Hardcover – January 12, 2016
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Thomas C. Leonard
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Print length264 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherPrinceton University Press
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Publication dateJanuary 12, 2016
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Dimensions6.1 x 1.1 x 9.4 inches
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ISBN-100691169594
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ISBN-13978-0691169590
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Winner of the 2017 Joseph J. Spengler Best Book Prize, History of Economics Society
Finalist for the 2017 Hayek Prize, The Manhattan Institute
One of Bloomberg View's Great History Books of 2016
"Illiberal Reformers is the perfect title for this slim but vital account of the perils of intellectual arrogance in dealing with explosive social issues."--David Oshinsky, New York Times Book Review
"A deft analysis. . . . [I]nsightful."--Amity Shlaes, Wall Street Journal
"Particularly timely . . . a superlative narrative about a pivotal era of American history."--American Thinker
"Compelling. . . . Leonard reveals the largely forgotten intellectual origins of many current controversies."--Virginia Postrel, Bloomberg View
"Excellent."--Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution
"Explosively brilliant."--Jeffrey Tucker, Foundation for Economic Education
"[A] brief, well written book."--Herbert Hovenkamp, The New Rambler
"Elegant and persuasive. . . . Read Leonard."--Deirdre Nansen McCloskey, Reason
"Those puzzled by the ease with which contemporary progressive political movements have turned against liberal values such as free speech will find much material for reflection in Leonard's lucid intellectual history of early twentieth-century progressivism. . . . [Illiberal Reformers] illuminates one phase in the centuries-long American struggle between the quest for liberal values and the impulse to build a godly commonwealth on the back of a strong state."--Walter Russell Mead, Foreign Affairs
"Leonard combines rigorous research with lucid writing, presenting a work that is intellectually sound, relevant, and original."--Joseph Larsen, josephjonlarsen.com
"Illiberal Reformers is a great achievement and an important contribution to the revisionist historical literature."--Steven Hayward, National Review
"Illiberal Reformers is a downright frightening tale of how intellectual arrogance and a belief in one's own superiority leads to callous disregard for individual rights and dignity. Budding social engineers, whether the social justice warriors of the left or the theocratic conservatives of the right, should take note of this past and seriously reckon with it as they grope for state power to implement their messianic visions of the common good. But somehow I have a feeling they'll be too thoroughly convinced of their own moral rectitude to take seriously the lessons of the Progressive Era. Cautionary tales have a way of missing those who need them most."--Matthew Harwood, American Conservative
"To reflect on the significance of the Progressive era, Illiberal Reformers is a must read."--Pierre Lemieux, Regulation
"An excellent book and a cautionary tale for our own times."--Robert Whales, Choice
"Thomas Leonard has crafted an elegant, original, and cleverly argued account of core progressive ideas. Illiberal Reformers is deeply researched, and far ranging in the deployment of primary sources. Leonard has not just recycled material from the voluminous secondary literatures on eugenics, economics, immigration, race ‘theory,' labor studies, and Darwinism. Instead he has invariably read key thinkers' publications and quotes from these primary documents, often to devastating effect. The book is a major achievement."--Desmond King, Perspectives on Politics
"One hopes that Leonard's fine volume will put an end to the reflexive habit of many to defend the early liberals, who when it came to people unlike themselves were with rare exception not liberal at all."--Stephen Carter, Bloomberg View
"A very important book that deserves to be read by every economist and academic, particularly those interested in American history, and especially those interested in the history of economic thought and the economics profession."--Patrick Newman, Independent Review
"The work of patient and pathbreaking economists like Leonard has opened up so much critical territory for those studying the history of economic knowledge from other disciplinary vantages. Illiberal Reformers places the consequential alliance between economics and eugenics in the Progressive Era in clear focus and suggests exciting new lines of inquiry for scholars interested in the tangled history of race, state, and market in modern America."--Daniel Platt, Journal of Cultural Economy
"A well-researched and clearly argued work which effectively ties changes in political economy to changes in popular thought, and shows how those changes to thinking effected the very bodies of people living in that society. A very accessible book."--Wesley R. Bishop, Labour-Le Travail
"Illiberal Reformers represents scholarship of the highest order."--Braham Dabscheck, Economic and Labour Relations Review
"Illiberal Reformers is a tour de force."--Leslie Jones, Quarterly Review
"Illiberal Reformers admirably reconstructs the much-repressed 'dark side' of social science progressivism."--Guy Alchon, Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas
"Illiberal Reformers is a masterly account of the intellectual currents that came to dominate American politics in the first half of the 20th century and, in many respects, dominate it still."--Michael M. Uhlmann, Claremont Review of Books
"In this fascinating book, Thomas C. Leonard explains how many leading progressives came to advocate for race-based immigration restrictions, eugenics, Social Darwinism, unequal pay for women, and even 'protecting women from employment' altogether."--Mark Joseph Stern, SlatePicks
"Illiberal Reformers tells a story that captures the mind, breaks the heart, and turns the stomach."--Art Carden, Cato Journal
"Required reading for anyone interested in the history of economics and U.S. politics."--Eric Scorsone & David Schweikhardt, Journal of Economic Issues
"Leonard's book offers a broad, forceful treatment and will have to be taken seriously by anyone seeking to understand and evaluate progressivism."--Kevin Schmiesing, Catholic Social Science Review
"Thomas Leonard's Illiberal Reformers is a significant contribution to the historiography of the Progressive Era, by one of the finest scholars working in the field."--Marco Cavalieri, Journal of The History of Economic Thought
"A masterly account of the intellectual currents that came to dominate American politics in the first half of the 20th century and, in many respects, dominate it still."--Michael M. Uhlmann, Claremont Review of Books
Review
"Economists like to think of their ancestors as heroic seekers of truth, each generation, as Newton suggested, standing on the shoulders of the giants who came before. Thomas Leonard demonstrates clearly that the story of economics in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century America was far more complex―and more interesting. He shows how the economists of that era combined their passion for social reform with religion, eugenics, and evolution theory in ways that seem incredible today. This book is an eye-opener."―Craufurd Goodwin, James B. Duke Professor of Economics Emeritus, Duke University
"This untold story of how Progressive Era activists helped construct the extensive role of government in the economy sheds light on today's technocratic dilemmas. Which decisions need to be left to experts, the ‘social engineers,' and which require democratic participation? Thomas Leonard's book demonstrates that during the Progressive Era this question was resolved only by combining democratic reform with the exclusion of women, African Americans, immigrants, and disabled people as full members of society. It underlines the fact that the tension between ‘expert' economic administration and individual liberties remains at the heart of current political debates."―Diane Coyle, author of GDP: A Brief but Affectionate History
"Illiberal Reformers makes a substantial contribution to the much contested history of U.S. progressivism by providing fascinating new evidence of what Leonard terms its ‘dark side.' This book's rich narrative will amply reward readers interested in the discrete histories of social science, science, politics, culture, industrial relations, and general U.S. history, and offers a wealth of new material on discrimination based on gender, race, and class."―Mary O. Furner, University of California, Santa Barbara
From the Back Cover
"Mythologies that arise around individuals, groups, and ideas of the past tend to mask many warts. Thomas Leonard's excellent book about American economics during the Progressive Era shows how progressives' efforts to champion reform drew on a vision of scientific development that would institutionalize the eugenic creed and, in the process, do great violence to the liberal project that had been at the heart of the American system. Illiberal Reformers provides a powerful lesson in the tensions that surround ideals of social progress, scientific expertise, and the democratic system."--Steven G. Medema, University of Colorado, Denver
"Economists like to think of their ancestors as heroic seekers of truth, each generation, as Newton suggested, standing on the shoulders of the giants who came before. Thomas Leonard demonstrates clearly that the story of economics in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century America was far more complex--and more interesting. He shows how the economists of that era combined their passion for social reform with religion, eugenics, and evolution theory in ways that seem incredible today. This book is an eye-opener."--Craufurd Goodwin, James B. Duke Professor of Economics Emeritus, Duke University
"This untold story of how Progressive Era activists helped construct the extensive role of government in the economy sheds light on today's technocratic dilemmas. Which decisions need to be left to experts, the 'social engineers, ' and which require democratic participation? Thomas Leonard's book demonstrates that during the Progressive Era this question was resolved only by combining democratic reform with the exclusion of women, African Americans, immigrants, and disabled people as full members of society. It underlines the fact that the tension between 'expert' economic administration and individual liberties remains at the heart of current political debates."--Diane Coyle, author of GDP: A Brief but Affectionate History
"Illiberal Reformers makes a substantial contribution to the much contested history of U.S. progressivism by providing fascinating new evidence of what Leonard terms its 'dark side.' This book's rich narrative will amply reward readers interested in the discrete histories of social science, science, politics, culture, industrial relations, and general U.S. history, and offers a wealth of new material on discrimination based on gender, race, and class."--Mary O. Furner, University of California, Santa Barbara
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Princeton University Press (January 12, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 264 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0691169594
- ISBN-13 : 978-0691169590
- Item Weight : 1.25 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.1 x 1.1 x 9.4 inches
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#1,040,094 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,649 in Economic History (Books)
- #5,544 in Discrimination & Racism (Books)
- #12,057 in Historical Study (Books)
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Top reviews from the United States
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Perhaps Leonard's greatest contribution is his inclusion of all sides of the political impact of progressive ideas. Today, progressivism is associated exclusively with the left. Leonard documents how early progressive ideas also were championed by Republican leaders such as Theodore Roosevelt. The idea that systematic policy could be created for the common good by gathering and evaluating data in a scientific manner dates to this era and was a conscious rejection of the previous view of the economy as a self-correcting mechanism best left alone. Entire new fields of academic study--economics, sociology, political science, public administration--were developed to provide a cadre of "experts" to steer government and society.
Leonard does an excellent job of tracing how the idea that society must be managed impacted thought and policy in the early twentieth century. Darwinian ideas were adapted to fit ideology, with races ranked in status. Anglo-Saxons--presumably the "most evolved" race--were to be encouraged to produce more children. "Lesser" races--including immigrants from southern Europe, as well as Asians, Africans, and Latinos--were to be kept separate, excluded from the gene pool if not from the country altogether. Policies from forced sterilization, prohibition, and discouraging women from college and employment all stemmed from the idea of protecting the preferred Anglo-Saxon race. The needs of the individual were to be subordinated to the good of society as a whole.
Leonard ends his account by noting that World War I dealt a heavy blow to early progressivists assurance that progress was inevitable and that social change could be scientifically managed. He notes the idea of eugenics has been widely discredited, particularly in the wake of the horrors of Nazi rule and the Second World War. The one element that would have added to the value of "Illiberal Reformers" would have been a brief concluding survey of how progressive ideology evolved in later decades. Today, the name "progressive" and the idea of managing economies and government for social betterment are largely associated with the left. Meanwhile, early progressive ideas of race, particularly the view of whites as a superior group facing demographic "race suicide" are now associated with the fringe right. A brief survey of how this split evolved would only have further strengthened this excellent history.
John R. Commons, Frank W. Taussig, and Richard T. Ely are just a few of the founders of the American Economic Association that Leonard reveals had pretty extraordinary racist leanings. Again, it wasn't uncommon for the time, which is something Leonard regularly explains, but he goes on to show that these pillars of academia and their ideas were considered the top scientific ideas of the period.
Leonard also does a great job of explaining the founding of the American Economic Association and its transition from its classical liberal roots to more formalistic scientism. Wanting to be viewed as a true hard science, which was becoming more in vogue at the time, these academics eschewed the moral philosophical heritage of economics and shifted the curriculum toward positive science.
I highly recommend this book, and have used it in an undergraduate setting with great success.
Top reviews from other countries
Originally, it was an Evangelical movement, that wanted to do good in the world. “The protest of the progressives originated not out of personal suffering but rather out of moral and intellectual discontent with the suffering (and enrichment) of others.” This ‘do-gooder’ attitude had a superiority complex at its heart, as found in most religions. Later the movement became more associated with secular preferences, yet retained its religious zeal. “The progressives’ urge to reform America sprang from an evangelical compulsion to set the world to rights, and they unabashedly described their purposes as a Christian mission to build a Kingdom of Heaven on earth. In the language of the day, they preached a social gospel.”
It was a movement that saw a problem with the individual humanism that existed in the United states, and wished to replace it with a more German efficiency. Many in the movement were inspired by Darwinian theory, and the US President, Woodrow Wilson, saw the government as a living organism “accountable to Darwin not to Newton.”
The movement promoted ‘Economics’ as a ‘scientific study’, often requiring its students to study in Germany. “Germany exposed the young Americans to the ideas of the German Historical School of political economy, with its positive view of state economic intervention, quintessentially compulsory insurance against sickness, industrial accidents, debility, and old age. Most of their German professors…were hostile to the idea of natural economic laws, which they disparaged as “English” economics, a swipe at the classically liberal tendency of political economy in Great Britain.”
“John R. Commons said that social progress required the individual to be controlled, liberated, and expanded by collective action. Columbia progressive economist Henry R. Seager …declared that the industrial economy had simply obviated the creed of individualism. Individuals, Ross maintained, were but “plastic lumps of human dough,” to be formed on the great “social kneading board.”
“Economics, Seligman told his receptive confreres, was going to be the basis of social progress, and economists were going to be the creators of the future; indeed, they would be the philosophers of American social life. A grateful public would pay deference to the economist’s expertise.”
In essence, progressives had a mechanistic view of human nature, that abhorred free will and saw people as ‘human ants’, or cogs in an economic machine. On the whole, they despised democracy, promoting an aristocratic ‘expert’ governing elite of ‘betters’ on a second-class citizenry. They had little to no regard for individual people, preferring to substitute Social Darwinian attitudes. In a separate article, ‘Mistaking Eugenics for Social Darwinism’, Leonard distinguishes the original Darwinian theories from those emanating from Herbert Spencer’s ‘Survival of the fittest’. It was the latter that led to Eugenics, a ‘set of beliefs and practices that aim to improve the genetic quality of a human population, typically by excluding people and groups judged to be inferior and promoting those judged to be superior.’
The eventual destination of eugenics was found amongst Germany’s most infamous leader, Adolf Hitler. There, he adopted a racist ideology that saw the ‘Aryan race’ as the superior race, and led to the extermination of millions of Jews, Disabled, Gipsies and other groups deemed inferior.
The question that needs to be asked of today’s progressives is whether they still see themselves as morally superior? In adopting a creed, such as ‘hate speech’, do they view anyone who dissents as an inferior human being? Worse still, as a lesser person? If so, the racism, so evident in early progressive ideology, is still there (albeit camouflaged by adherence to the creed of ‘Critical Theory’, where the ‘whites’ have replaced the ‘blacks’ and ‘men have replaced ‘women’ as the underclass).
This book is a warning to all those who flock, without thinking, to a ‘progressive’ political ideology. Be careful that, in a wish to do good, you do not do irrevocable harm instead. For instance, look at the current deference being paid to the SAGE (Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies) group ‘advising’ government on its Covid-19 strategy. Are we becoming too reliant on ‘experts’ and their ‘scientific models’? Are epidemiologists the new economists? Have we lost confidence in ‘common sense’ and allowed ourselves to lose our liberties without debate?
本書によれば、そもそも米国で20世紀初め、左翼の政治圧力により最低賃金法が導入された際、その目的は、技能・経験に乏しい代わりに低賃金を強みに働く移民や非白人を排除し、白人労働者の賃金を高く保つことだった。排除の背後には当時流行の優生学思想があったという、背筋の凍るような事実も描かれる。以下は第9章より抜粋。(数字は位置ナンバー)
1910年代米国で経済学者たちは最低賃金について論争し、賛否は別として、次の点で意見が一致した。すなわち最低賃金規制が成功すれば、生産性の低い労働者は仕事がなくなる。非熟練労働者は雇うコストが上がると雇われなくなる。(3335)
米国の左翼進歩派知識人の多くは、最低賃金法を支持した。(移民や非白人など)生産性の低い労働者が職を失い、雇われなくなることは承知のうえである。彼ら改革者はそれを犠牲ではなく、社会への利益と考えたのである。(3356)
米国の左翼進歩派知識人は、能力の劣った者が最低賃金で仕事を失っても不都合はないと考えた。それによって他の労働者の賃金が高くなり、米国の賃金水準が守られるし、アングロサクソンの人種統合も保たれるからだ。(3359)
最低賃金は、劣った労働者を見つけ、科学的に取り扱う役目を果たすとされた。英国の社会主義者でフェビアン協会の中心人物であるウェッブ夫妻によれば、文明社会は最低賃金によって「産業上の病人」を労働力から取り除いたという。(3363)
最低賃金による隔離では不十分な場合、能力の劣った人々に避妊手術を強制せよとシカゴ大学の神学者兼社会学者ヘンダーソンは提案した。能力の優れた人々に子供をもっと多く生むよう求めるのは、不公正で非現実的だからという。(3373)












