Credit, Cops, and Cages: A Theory of Capitalist Individualism
By (Author) Alexis N. Goad
By (author) Daniel Sullivan
By (author) Harrison J. Schmitt
By (author) Lauren Sedivy
By (author) Tiana Jones
By (author) Tyler Jimenez
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
22nd January 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Hardback
240
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Longstanding debates about neoliberalism in the United States center around whether it has created a culture of entrepreneurial selfhood or a carceral state. Credit, Cops, and Cages presents a novel theory and relevant empirical evidence arguing that capitalist individualism combines both of these tendencies.
The books interdisciplinary authors first derive a critical framework and set of social-psychological hypotheses from the long-neglected criminological writings of the early Frankfurt School. They then test and explore these hypotheses with new data and analyses in a series of chapters that guide the reader down the ladder of capitalist individualism. In the process, the authors synthesize and critically examine scholarship of Constitutional law; big data on indebtedness, segregation, and police militarization; psychological surveys capturing and comparing attitudes and emotions around debt and policing; and the intimate testimony of those who are deeply in debt or are currently incarcerated. Unique in its combination of philosophy and social scientific research, this book restores the relevance of the Frankfurt Schools ideas and methods to a comprehensive understanding of contemporary U.S. society.
Alexis N. Goad is a PhD candidate in social psychology at the University of Arizona.
Tyler Jimenez is assistant professor of psychology at the University of Arizona.
Tiana Kathryn Jones works as a Deputy State Public Defender for the Colorado State Public Defender.
Harrison J. Schmitt is assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at Skidmore College.
Lauren Sedivy is an existential psychologist and prison reform advocate whose research focuses on supporting rehabilitation and successful reentry for incarcerated individuals.
Daniel Sullivan is the director of the Social and Personality Psychology Program at the University of Arizona in Tucson.