This article argues the Canadian government's decision in 2010 to eliminate the mandatory long-form census constitutes a mobilizing appeal to libertarian populism commensurate not only with neoliberal concepts of individualism, private property, and the role of the state, but also with a redefinition of what counts as valid argumentation and a legitimate basis for making knowledge claims. This rationale has implications for sociological research and theory, for the profession of sociology, and for a sociological vision of society. © Canadian Journal of Sociology/Cahiers canadiens de sociologie.
CITATION STYLE
Ramp, W., & Harrison, T. W. (2012). Libertarian populism, neoliberal rationality, and the mandatory long-form census: Implications for sociology. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 37(3), 273–294. https://doi.org/10.29173/cjs18222
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