Andrew Dilts

Associate Professor of Political Science and International Relations

  • Los Angeles CA UNITED STATES

Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts

Contact

Biography

Andrew Dilts is a political theorist who works in the traditions of critical theory and the history of political thought, focusing primarily on the relationships between race, sexuality, political membership, sovereignty, and punishment in the United States.


Prof. Dilts studied economics at Indiana University and the London School of Economics before earning a doctorate in political science at the University of Chicago. Prior to joining the faculty at Loyola Marymount in 2011, Dilts was a Harper-Schmidt Fellow in the Society of Fellows in the Liberal Arts at the University of Chicago, teaching exclusively in the College’s “Common Core” curriculum as Collegiate Assistant Professor of Social Sciences. During the 2016-2017 academic year, Dilts was in residence as a Member of the School of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Studies. During the spring of 2018, Dilts was Senior Visiting Fellow in the Department of Government at the London School of Economics and Political Science.


Dilts is the author of Punishment and Inclusion: Race, Membership, and the Limits of American Liberalism (Fordham University Press, 2014) which gives a theoretical and historical account of felon/criminal disenfranchisement as it has been practiced in the United States, drawing widely on early modern political theory, post-structuralist french thought, queer theory, disability theory, and critical race theory. Dilts is also co-editor (with Perry Zurn of American University) of Active Intolerance: Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the Future of Abolition (Palgrave 2016).


Dilts is co-editor (with Natalie Cisneros of Seattle University) of a special project for Radical Philosophy Review called “Political Theory and Philosophy in a Time of Mass Incarceration,” and has published in Political Theory, Foucault Studies, New Political Science, PhiloSOPHIA, and The Carceral Notebooks. Dilts is also a founding member of Abolition: A Journal of Insurgent Politics and the Prison and Theory Working Group.


Currently, Dilts is at work on two book-length projects. The first—The Birth of Human Capital—traces a critical genealogy of neoliberal human capital theory, demonstrating its deep connections to political systems of white supremacy, patriarchy, and heternormative ableism. The second—What Freedom is For—offers a account of radical freedom based in abolitionist and queer insurgent practices.

Education

University of Chicago

Ph.D.

Political Science

2008

University of Chicago

M.A.

Political Science

2004

Indiana University, Bloomington

B.A.

Economics

2002

Social

Areas of Expertise

Politcal Theory (Modern and Contemporary)
Critical Race Theory
Critical Theory
Punishment Theory
Critical Prison Studies
Race and Politics
Philosophy of Law
Public Law & Judicial Politics
American Political Thought
Queer Theory
Feminist Theory
Democratic Theory
American Political Development
Law and Society

Courses

Foundations of Political Theory (POLS 2000)

“Foundations” is a reading, writing, and discussion intensive course that will introduce students to the history of political thought. Through an engagement with “classic” texts spanning the ancient, medieval, modern, and contemporary periods in the “west,” we will ask hard questions about justice, truth, value, happiness and the good life, individual and common good, the foundations of political societies, the origins and work of inequality, the value of freedom, subjection, subjectivity and citizenship, violence and morality, and many others. Perhaps above all, we will ask what it means to make something “foundational” at all, and what we have “built” upon that foundation.

View more

Critical Race Theory (POLS 3050 / AFAM 3998 / CHST 3998)

This course takes up the question of race and politics through the lens of critical theory, legal theory, and political philosophies of race and difference. To that end, it is an extended study of what the philosopher Charles Mills describes as “white supremacy as a political system” as it is exercised through the law, social norms, and ways of thinking and knowing. It will primarily focus on the specific academic and political movement of Critical Race Theory (CRT), an offshoot of the Critical Legal Studies tradition that developed in the last quarter of the 20th century and which has taken on renewed importance in the 21st century and its repeated yet unsubstantiated claims of being a “post-racial” social and political order. The course will pay special attention to intersections of race with, sexuality, gender, and disability

View more

Contemporary Political Theory (POLS 3270)

This is a survey course of late 20th and early 21st century political theory. We will cover a range of theoretical approaches in contemporary political theory, including: (1) social welfare liberalism, (2) libertarianism, (3) civic and humanist republicanism, (4) discourse ethics and deliberative democracy, (5) identitarian critiques, and (6) post-structuralism. Throughout the semester, we will pay special attention to two constellations of questions centered on the ideas of “freedom” and “critique.” What do we mean by freedom? Who is the “free agent” or “free subject” of political life? What is the relation between political freedom and freedom in social, economic, and moral spheres? Secondly, what is critique? What is the object of critique? What grounds critique? What role does critical analysis play in political theory? What does it mean to be a critical political thinker in our daily lives and in our multiplicity? What, in the end, is the relationship between freedom and critique?

View more

Show All +

Articles

Carceral Enjoyments & Killjoying the Social Life of Social Death

Building Abolition: Decarceration and Social Justice, Edited by Chloë Taylor and Kelly Struthers Montford

Dilts, Andrew. “Carceral Enjoyments & Killjoying the Social Life of Social Death,” in Building Abolition: Decarceration and Social Justice, Edited by Chloë Taylor and Kelly Struthers Montford, 196-223. New York: Routledge, 2021.

View more

Crisis, Critique, and Abolition

A Time for Critique, edited by Didier Fassin and Bernard Harcourt

Dilts, Andrew. “Crisis, Critique, and Abolition,” in A Time for Critique, edited by Didier Fassin and Bernard Harcourt, 230-251. New York: Columbia University Press, 2019.

German Translation: “Krise, Kritik und Abolition” in Abolitionismus. Ein Reader, edited by Daniel Loick and Vanessa Thompson. Berlin: Suhrkamp, 2022. (Translation by Marvin Ester and Ann- Katrin Kastberg)

The Ugliness of Freedom’s Practices, Hypervisibility, and Enjoyment: A Response to Elisabeth Anker

Theory & Event

Dilts, Andrew. “The Ugliness of Freedom’s Practices, Hypervisibility, and Enjoyment: A Response to Elisabeth Anker.” Theory & Event 23, no. 1 (2020): 215-226.

Show All +
Powered by