Berlinghoff, Maddison Brooke Kapua'Ena2021-06-052021-06-052021-05-28vt_gsexam:30375http://hdl.handle.net/10919/103623Neoliberalism once started as an economic theory but overtime has developed into an arm of state social control. This thesis asks if neoliberal economic policies have affected civil liberties in the United States and sets out to understand this relationship in several ways. Firstly, by investigating the shift from Keynesianism to market fundamentalism. Secondly, by evaluating the growth in the prison industrial complex. Third, by asking questions of growing social insecurity from an increasingly privatized social safety net. This thesis explored four hypotheses, each one finding support. The overall argument is that the economic sphere and the free market has obstructed the social sphere. Finally, the thesis concludes with a brief discussion of toxic individualism as it relates to socialization after a long period of extreme market privatization.ETDIn CopyrightNeoliberalismCriminal JusticeWelfareSocial ServicesMass IncarcerationPolitical EconomyHas Neoliberalism Affected American Civil Liberties? Examining the Criminal Justice System and the Welfare StateThesis