Home / Books / The Business of Racism

The Business of Racism

Labor and Environment in Brazil's Racial Capitalism

Book

Pages: 272

Illustrations: 4 illustrations

Release Date: May 19, 2026

Author: Ian Carrillo

In The Business of Racism, Ian Carrillo employs a case study from Brazil’s sugarcane industry to show how racial capitalism is promulgated and maintained through politics and business. As Carrillo recounts, in the mid-2000s, Brazil embarked on a state-led project to improve environmental and labor conditions in sugarcane production. He describes how, seeing increased government regulation of their worksite as a threat to their power, the elites of Brazil’s sugar-ethanol industry repurposed long-standing racial ideologies to undermine progressive institutions and elevate their own leaders. Carrillo’s extensive ethnographic fieldwork in mills and plantations, as well as interviews with federal labor regulators and sugar-ethanol industry elites in Brazil, weaves together an account of how Brazil’s labor and environmental regulations are forged through racial and class struggles at worksites and within the state. The Business of Racism contributes to ongoing sociological debates about race, development, and the environment while highlighting future pathways for achieving racial justice, labor equality, and climate sustainability.

Praise

“Ian Carrillo’s field research comes alive in this excellent book, exposing a firsthand understanding of how racial dynamics infuse one of the worst industries in the world for its contribution to forced labor, poverty, and environmental degradation.” - Wendy Wolford, author of This Land Is Ours Now

“Drawing on rich ethnography and candid interviews with planter elites and regulators, Ian Carrillo exposes how racism hides in plain sight in Brazil’s sugarcane regions—woven into everyday practices of Brazilian modern democracy. A critical intervention, the book illuminates the co-constitution of race and labor, uncovering the racial tropes and power structures that fuel one of the world’s most exploitative industries.” - Graziella Moraes Silva, Associate Professor of Sociology, Geneva Graduate Institute

Buy

Availability: In stock

Price: $29.95

Request a desk or exam copy

Information

Author/Editor Bios

Back to Top
Ian Carrillo is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Oklahoma.

Table Of Contents

Back to Top
Acknowledgments  ix
Introduction  1
1. Slave Labor and the Remaking of the Racial State in the Amazon  29
2. Reforming the Business of Racism in Sugarcane  59
3. Racialized Modernity, Interest Convergence, and São Paulo Elites  95
4. Racialized Organizations, Crises of Legitimacy, and Northeastern Elites  125
5. Regulators and Repertoires of Revaluation  151
6. The Patrimonial Backlash  181
Conclusion  209
Appendix: Methods  225
References  229
Index  253

Rights

Back to Top

Sales/Territorial Rights: World

Rights and licensing

Additional Information

Back to Top
Paper ISBN: 978-1-4780-3315-8 / Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4780-2970-0 / eISBN: 978-1-4780-6189-2 / DOI: https://doi.org/10.1215/9781478061892