
New Books Network Danielle Wiggins, "Black Excellence: Atlanta and the Making of Modern Black Liberalism" (U Pennsylvania Press, 2025)
Mar 8, 2026
Danielle Wiggins, assistant history professor at Georgetown and author of Black Excellence, explores Atlanta’s role in shaping modern Black liberalism. She traces 'Black excellence' as a disciplinary ethic, examines policing, corporate family programs, and Black entrepreneurship, and considers grassroots pushback and how city politics fed national New Democrat ideas.
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Black Liberalism Is Dual Pronged
- Wiggins defines Black liberalism as a two-pronged project combining aggressive state intervention with internal community reform.
- She names the persistent impulse to critique and reform Black behavior the "disciplinary impulse," coexisting with an interventionist aim to change racist institutions.
Atlanta Child Murders Sparked Competing Community Stories
- The Atlanta child murders panic was framed by Black elites as a "crisis of community" and "Black-on-Black crime," prompting police-led safe houses and quadrant centers.
- Families and grassroots groups offered alternative explanations, blaming disinvestment rather than moral failure.
Grassroots Care Versus Police-Led Community Policing
- Grassroots responses blended Black feminist care and armed community self-defense, offering community policing alternatives to state-led approaches.
- The Committee to Stop Children's Murders (STOP) led counter-investigations and long-term community development plans.

