“…Similarly, neoliberalising tendencies have in effect, in many places, shifted the terms of the state–citizen relation to one of provider–consumer (Anand, 2012) or facilitator–entrepreneur (Vicol, 2020). This ‘squeezed middle’ is then often described as the driving force of resurgent populism and nationalism, across the global North (Kalb, 2019; Koch et al, 2021) and increasingly also in the global South (for example in India and Brazil). Moreover, there is often a racial dimension to this aspect of class stratification, based on selective inclusion and exclusion, which remains underplayed or unacknowledged in official state policy, as in these cited examples (see also Bhambra, 2017; Krishna, 2015), and that presents a more complicated picture in some of the cases in this special issue, like in Bolivia, Mozambique and South Africa (Bolt, 2022; Schubert, 2022; Sheild Johansson, 2022 – all in this issue).…”