Thomas J. Sugrue is Silver Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis and History and Director of the Cities Collaborative at New York University. For twenty-four years, he was on the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania, where he was David Boies Professor of History and Sociology and founding director of the Penn Social Science and Policy Forum. A specialist in twentieth-century American politics, urban history, civil rights, and race, Sugrue was educated at Columbia; King's College, Cambridge; and Harvard, where he earned his Ph.D. in 1992. He is an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a fellow of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, a fellow of the New York Institute for the Humanities, a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and the past president of the Urban History Association and the Social Science History Association. He received an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Wayne State University in 2016.
He is author of Not Even Past: Barack Obama and the Burden of Race (Princeton University Press, 2010) and Sweet Land of Liberty: The Forgotten Struggle for Civil Rights in the North (Random House, 2008), a Main Selection of the History Book Club and a finalist for the 2008 Los Angeles Times Book Prize. His first book, The Origins of the Urban Crisis (Princeton University Press, 1996), won the Bancroft Prize in American History, the Philip Taft Prize in Labor History, the President's Book Award of the Social Science History Association, and the Urban History Association Award for Best Book in North American Urban History and was selected a Choice Outstanding Academic Book, an American Prospect On-Line Top Shelf Book on Race and Inequality, and a Lingua Franca Breakthrough Book on Race. It has been translated into Japanese. In 2005, Princeton University Press selected The Origins of the Urban Crisis as one of its 100 most influential books of the past one hundred years and published a new edition of The Origins of the Urban Crisis as a Princeton Classic.
Sugrue's most recent book is The Long Year: A 2020 Reader, with Caitlin Zaloom. He is also author of These United States: A Nation in the Making, 1890 to the Present, coauthored with Glenda Gilmore of Yale University. A selection of the History Book Club and the Military History Book Club, it has been reviewed in Slate and the New York Times, which hailed it as "revisionist history at its best." Sugrue is currently engaged in a research project on race, ethnicity, and citizenship in France and the United States and spent part of June 2009 conducting research in the suburbs of Paris. His long-term research project is a history of the rise and travails of the modern American real estate industry, from the late nineteenth century to the current economic crisis. Sugrue's other books include W.E.B. DuBois, Race, and the City: The Philadelphia Negro and its Legacy (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1998), co-edited with Michael B. Katz; The New Suburban History (University of Chicago Press, 2006) with Kevin Kruse; Immigration and Metropolitan Revitalization in the United States (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2017) co-edited with Domenic Vitiello; Neoliberal Cities (NYU Press, 2020), co-edited with Andrew J. Diamond. He is one of the founding co-editors of the book series Politics and Culture in Modern America at the University of Pennsylvania Press. Several books in the critically acclaimed series have won major prizes. Sugrue also serves on a number of other editorial boards.
Sugrue has published over 40 articles in such places as the Journal of American History, Journal of Urban History, Labor History, Prospects, International Labor and Working-Class History, American Behavioral Scientist, Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities, Michigan Journal of Race and the Law, Budapest Quarterly, and in several edited collections on a wide range of topics including modern American culture and politics, affirmative action, twentieth-century conservatism and liberalism, race, urban economic development, suburbanization, poverty and public policy, and colonial American history. His essays and reviews have also appeared in the New York Times, National Geographic, The Nation, Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, Dissent, Boston Globe, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, The Hollywood Reporter, Detroit Free Press, and Philadelphia Inquirer. He has also blogged on Talking Points Memo. Sugrue's essay "Affirmative Action from Below" was published in The Best American History Essays 2006 (Palgrave Macmillan), a collection of ten essays selected from over three hundred learned and popular journals. His work has been translated into Japanese, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and Hungarian.
Sugrue has won fellowships and grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Fletcher Foundation, the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, the American Philosophical Society, the American Council of Learned Societies, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Kellogg Foundation, and the Social Science Research Council, and has been Research Fellow in Governmental Studies at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC. He has been a visiting professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, New York University, and the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris. As a 2007 winner of the Organization of American Historians/Japanese Association of American Studies Residency, he spent part of summer 2007 at Nanzan University in Nagoya, Japan. Sugrue has also served on the boards of the American Historical Association, the Russell Sage Foundation, the Urban History Association (UHA), the Social Science History Association (SSHA), and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, has co-chaired the program committee of the SSHA, and has served on program, nominating, and prize committees for the Organization of American Historians, the Policy History Association, UHA, and SSHA.
Sugrue is an award-winning teacher. His courses on America in the 1960s and on U.S. History from 1877-1933 have been selected "Hall of Fame Classes" by the Penn Course Review and he won the 1998 and 2012 Richard Dunn Teaching Award in the University of Pennsylvania Department of History. His former Ph.D. advisees are now tenured or tenure-line faculty at Arcadia University, Columbia University, Dartmouth College, Loyola Marymount University, University of Illinois-Chicago, University of Pennsylvania, University of Richmond, and Utica College; public historians at the Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University, and Gallagher and Associates; chair of the Bellarmine College Prep School history department and an editor at Routledge.
Outside the classroom, Sugrue combines scholarly research and civic engagement. For six years , he was co-chair of the board of directors of the Bread and Roses Community Fund, a foundation that supports grassroots organizations working for racial and economic equality. He also served for more than six years as Vice Chair of the Philadelphia Historical Commission, the city agency that handles preservation, planning, and development issues. Sugrue is also involved in civil rights policy locally and nationally. He served as an expert for the University of Michigan in the two federal lawsuits concerning affirmative action in its undergraduate and law school admissions, decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2003. More recently, he served as an expert witness in the voting rights cases U.S. v. City of Euclid, Ohio, U.S v City of Eastpointe, and Flores v. Islip, and in a predatory lending case, Adkins v. Morgan Stanley. Sugrue's scholarship was also cited by Justice Stephen Breyer in the dissenting opinion in Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1. In July 2008, Sugrue testified before the National Commission on Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity .
Sugrue has given nearly 400 talks to audiences at colleges and universities throughout the U.S., in Argentina, Canada, Britain, Germany, France, Israel, and Japan, and to academic conferences, community groups, foundations, and religious organizations. Since 2002, he has served as an Organization of American Historians Distinguished Lecturer.