Joel Kotkin
Washington Fellow
Joe Kotkin is a Washington Fellow at The Claremont Institute’s Center for the American Way of Life. Described by The New York Times as “America’s uber-geographer,” he is an internationally-recognized authority on global, economic, political, and social trends. His latest book, The Coming of Neo Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class (Encounter Books, 2020), deals with the issue of declining upward mobility and growing inequality in almost all middle and high-income countries.
Kotkin is the Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University in Orange, California and Executive Director of the Houston-based Center for Opportunity Urbanism. He is Senior Fellow for Heartland Forward and Executive Editor of the widely read website NewGeography.com. A regular contributor to the National Review, City Journal, Daily Beast, Quillette and Real Clear Politics, he also writes a weekly column for Digital First Media, which owns numerous daily newspapers in the greater Los Angeles region.
Kotkin recently completed several studies on Texas urbanism, the future of localism, the changing role of transit in America, and, most recently, California’s lurch towards feudalism. He is co-author of a report published in 2018 on the revival of the American Heartland for the Center for Opportunity Urbanism. As director of the Center for Demographics and Policy at Chapman, he was the lead author of a major study on housing, and recently, with Marshall Toplansky, published a strategic analysis for Orange County, CA.
Articles by Joel Kotkin
The Green Road to Tyranny
How California became a warning to the world
Rent Forever and Love It
The Looming Extinction of the Working Class
An entrenched oligarchic class increasingly controls politics, the media, and big business in America. This oligarchy’s interests and actions are more and more opposed to the prosperity of the working and middle classes: this oligarchy is making them poorer, weaker, and their lives less stable. And it is aligned with America’s political class, which refuses to see that American democracy will collapse without a healthy working and middle class. America will not survive this emerging neo-feudal economic order of limited mobility and sky-high inequality.