Jason Hackworth is a professor in the Department of Geography and Planning at the University of Toronto. He is the author of The Neoliberal City: Governance, Ideology, and Development in American Urbanism (2007) and Faith Based: Religious Neoliberalism and the Politics of Welfare in the United States (2012).
Throughout Manufacturing Decline, he demonstrates how even the most well-meaning plans maintain the austerity structures that became prevalent in the last half-century. These have immediate and long-lasting effects on the black populations of Rust Belt cities. * Cleveland Review of Books * Timely reading for troubled times...a sturdy exploration of a continuing problem. * Kirkus Reviews * Manufacturing Decline convincingly argues that, while the disappearance of manufacturing jobs affected Rust Belt cities, their decline was not inevitable. Jason Hackworth provides a marvelous exposition of how this decline was largely produced by the rise of neoliberal policies emphasizing free markets while deliberately overlooking the region's long history of racial disparities. -- Reynolds Farley, coauthor of <i>Detroit Divided</i> Manufacturing Decline implicates conservative thought leadership, anti-urban interests, and elite-and ordinary-laissez-faire racism in a deliberate, decades-long degradation of U.S. cities via privation, demolition, and desertion. It is a thoughtful, stimulating, and efficient read at the intersection of urban geography, planning, and the social sciences. -- Michael Leo Owens, author of <i>God and Government in the Ghetto: The Politics of Church-State Collaboration in Black America</i> Manufacturing Decline is a sobering yet essential read for anyone who is interested in the fate of America's inner cities. This recovery of the politics behind-and, indeed, that created-the devastating decline of key cities such as Detroit is deeply unsettling but ultimately uplifting. As Jason Hackworth makes clear, just as America's inner cities can be deliberately unmade to serve the political agenda of conservatives, so might they be remade in ways that could actually benefit all citizens equally. -- Heather Ann Thompson, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of <i>Blood in the Water: The Attica Prison Uprising of 1971 and Its Legacy</i>