Howard Winant is Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he is also affiliated with the Black Studies and Chicana/o Studies departments. He received his Ph.D from the University of California, Santa Cruz in 1980. Winant has worked and taught in Mexico, Brazil, and Argentina.
Winant's most influential work has been his 1986 collaboration with UC Berkeley Professor Michael Omi, Racial Formation in the United States. The theory draws upon Gramsci's conception of hegemony to describe the social construction of the race concept in contemporary US society. Omi and Winant argue that race emerged as an organizing factor in society because of political actions they call racial projects. The racial projects remain ongoing, making race an unstable social category that is constantly changing, as evidenced by the changing nature of race relations as the result of political actions such as the Civil Rights Movement. Still, as Gramsci would predict, the reforms secured during crisis moments like the Civil Rights era have contradictory effects: they both extend democracy and demobilize resistance. The political project of racial equality remains incomplete. Thus, the fundamental dynamics of race including institutional racism and continued inequality along racialized lines remain in place today, according to Omi and Winant. Racial formation has solidified as one of the primary paradigms of sociological understandings of race. Omi and Winant identify reductionist theories of race that identify race as epiphenomenal, rather than durable, as the chief competing theories of racial dynamics in contemporary sociology.
Current projects
Winant is the founder and director of the , a multidisciplinary program active on all ten UC campuses of the UC. The UCCNRS works to network and support new approaches to race/racism research and teaching at UC and beyond. Its deeper goal is to encourage interdisciplinary and collaborative work focused on advancing social/racial justice in an era of changing racial dynamics and persistent racial/ethnic conflict and inequality.
Key publications
"Just Do It: Notes on Politics and Race at the Dawn of the Obama Presidency," Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, Vol. 6, no. 1.
"Race and Racism: Toward a Global Future." In Ethnic and Racial Studies, Vol. 29. no. 5.
"Teaching Race and Racism in the 21st Century: Thematic Considerations." In Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society, Vol. 6, nos. 3-4.