Author Archives: Rohan Shah

About Rohan Shah

Rohan Shah is a PhD candidate in history at Columbia University. He works on 20th century US and international history with a focus on political-economy and intellectual life. His dissertation, "Reluctant Globalists: 'Interdependence,' Foreign Economic Policy and the End of Bretton Woods," examines the domestic response of labor unions, business lobbying organizations, and government officials to growing international economic entanglement across the 1970s and 1980s in the US.

“Blood is Stronger than Class”: Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s Global Culture of Poverty

Abstract This article examines the continuities between Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s critique of the US welfare state and the War on Poverty in the 1960s, and his response to the New International Economic Order and North-South politics in the 1970s. The connections between these two episodes help explain why neoconservatives embraced a sharply different view of political economy by the 1980s, and grew increasingly invested in foreign policy questions. The article argues that Moynihan’s ideas across these decades were united by an insistence on cultural and Continue reading → Continue reading →