• Subscribe
  • Log in
  • My Account
  • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • International
    • U.S. Politics
  • Culture
    • Books
    • Film
    • TV
    • Ideas
  • Faith
    • Faith in Focus
    • Faith and Reason
    • Prayer
    • Spirituality
    • Jesuitical Podcast
  • Vatican
    • Vatican Dispatch
    • Vatican News
    • Pope Leo XIV
    • Inside the Vatican Podcast
  • Scripture
    • Scripture Reflections
    • The Word
    • The Good Word
    • Preach Podcast
  • Podcasts
    • The Spiritual Life
    • Jesuitical
    • Inside the Vatican
    • Preach
    • Hark!
    • All Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • All issues
  • Donate

Sections

  • Politics
  • Faith
  • Culture
  • Vatican
  • Scripture
  • Podcasts

More from America

  • Podcasts
  • Video
  • Newsletters
  • Events
  • Voices
  • YouTube
  • Mobile App
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Contact Us

Print Edition

July/August 2026

July/August 2026

Past Issues

July/August 2026

Current Issue
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

Sections

  • Politics
  • Faith
  • Culture
  • Vatican
  • Scripture
  • Podcasts

More from America

  • Podcasts
  • Video
  • Newsletters
  • Events
  • Voices
  • YouTube
  • Mobile App
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Contact Us

Print Edition

July/August 2026

July/August 2026

Past Issues

July/August 2026

Current Issue
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
Skip to content
  • Donate
America Magazine

America Magazine

The Jesuit Review

  • Subscribe
  • Log in
  • My Account
Subscribe
  • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • International
    • U.S. Politics
  • Culture
    • Books
    • Film
    • TV
    • Ideas
  • Faith
    • Faith in Focus
    • Faith and Reason
    • Prayer
    • Spirituality
    • Jesuitical Podcast
  • Vatican
    • Vatican Dispatch
    • Vatican News
    • Pope Leo XIV
    • Inside the Vatican Podcast
  • Scripture
    • Scripture Reflections
    • The Word
    • The Good Word
    • Preach Podcast
  • Podcasts
    • The Spiritual Life
    • Jesuitical
    • Inside the Vatican
    • Preach
    • Hark!
    • All Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • All issues
Posted inArts & Culture, Books

Review: Can social justice activism go too far?

Lynch_0 by Dominic Lynch August 9, 2019

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
heather-mount-kvHk3mccNj0-unsplash
Photo by Heather Mount on Unsplash

For many Catholics, social justice is an imperative of their faith. Advancing a social justice agenda is not just something that is in vogue, but a crucial part of church teaching. But there is another social justice—a secular one unmoored from the faith-based tenets that created the concept in the first place. In Unjust: Social Justice and the Unmaking of America, Noah Rothman surveys and attempts to deconstruct systematically the social justice movement that he believes has gone awry.

Unjust

by Noah Rothman

Gateway Editions, 256 pages $28.99

Indeed, most of Unjust is a thorough examination of the most egregious examples of the modern social justice movement as Rothman sees it. This examination essentially amounts to a list of activist trends, aggressions and failings. It is also the book’s biggest shortcoming, not because demonstrating absurdity is a bad thing, but because it is used to the detriment of a more insightful analysis of the philosophical underpinnings of the negative trends Rothman identifies.

Rothman states early in the book that “the mixing of identity consciousness with the precepts of social justice” has transformed “an ethos of equality and egalitarianism across lines of class, race, and sex…into a bitter ideology that resents classically liberal policies.”

As Rothman sees it, social justice initially was a way for the Catholic Church to insert its ethics into the Enlightenment understanding of the “liberal and laissez-faire” way society should be ordered. Two Jesuits, Luigi Taparelli d’Azeglio and Matteo Liberatore (who helped draft Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical “Rerum Novarum” in 1891), laid the foundation for understanding social justice as “a moral theory of societal and economic development.”

“Identitarians” on both the left and the right, Noah Rothman argues, have consistently abandoned colorblind principles and have supplanted them with concerns central to their narrow identities.

But over the course of the mid-to-late 20th century, notions of social justice went very, very wrong. Rothman attributes their corruption to the rise of identity politics—which gained greater prominence after the 2016 presidential election—and “Identitarianism,” which he defines as “a set of values and beliefs based on the politics of personal identity.”

“Identitarians” on both the left and the right, Rothman argues, have consistently abandoned colorblind principles and have supplanted them with concerns central to their narrow identities. Rothman finds this leads to an emphasis on issues that divide, as well as the creation of a system that incentivizes claims of victimization to achieve preferred policy outcomes.

Ultimately, Unjust falls short of its mission. Its critical lens on the left and right is much needed, but the book fails to achieve the escape velocity needed to be as authoritative as it claims.

This article appears in August 19 2019.

Related

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window)X
  • Share on Mail (Opens in new window)Mail
Tagged: Books, Catholic Social Teaching, Social Justice, US Politics
Lynch_0

Dominic Lynch

Dominic Lynch is a writer from Chicago; he publishes the website The New Chicagoan.

More by Dominic Lynch

More from America


Vatican declare excommunicated SSPX bishops, warns priests and lay faithful of schism

Vatican declare excommunicated SSPX bishops, warns priests and lay faithful of schism

Making forgiveness look easy

Making forgiveness look easy

What would Tocqueville say about today’s weakened, politicized Christianity?

What would Tocqueville say about today’s weakened, politicized Christianity?

Classifieds

Your source for jobs, books, retreats, and much more.


  • July 10th at 11:30am EDT Gregorian University Foundation’s Distinguished Lecture Series
  • Saint Mary Magdalene – An Online Course
  • Women of the Dawn: Mary Magdalene and Tonantzin/Our Lady of Guadalupe – A Webinar
  • Spiritual Practices – An Online Course
  • “FOR SALE”: Antique stain-glass wood framed window of St. Augustine. 

See all classifieds

Most Popular


SSPX ordains four new bishops in defiance of Pope Leo and the Vatican
Pope Leo makes final appeal to SSPX before schismatic ordination of bishops: ‘Please turn back!’
ICE detains Texas-based religious sister on her way to Mass, releases her several hours later
Pope Leo appoints Italian sister to top Vatican post
Pope Leo overhauls Vatican finance watchdog, revises Rome vicariate reforms in busy day of decrees

America Today

Your daily guide to the most important stories from the Church and around the world - delivered to your inbox each morning. See more newsletters

July/August 2026

July/August 2026

Faith. Culture. Perspective

Support a trusted Catholic voice at the intersection of the Church and the world.

Subscribe

Politics

See all


After Iran debacle, is the Trump admin ready to listen to the Vatican?

The unsung story behind the growth and impact of the Catholic Church in Africa

500 years later, the Spanish conqueror of Mexico still stirs controversy on both sides of the Atlantic

Faith

See all


To understand Christian hospitality, look to the host

The Very Young Catholics project: How one book series shares children’s stories from around the world

Education is about more than test results. But how do we tell if it’s working?

Culture

See all


Finding a Lenten vulnerability in Rilke’s ‘Letters to a Young Poet’ 

Review: The ‘Scopes Monkey Trial’ and church-state tensions

Rob Reiner’s gift: Finding humanity—both on and off the screen

Vatican

See all


Pope Leo overhauls Vatican finance watchdog, revises Rome vicariate reforms in busy day of decrees

Pope Leo appoints Italian sister to top Vatican post

Pope Leo makes final appeal to SSPX before schismatic ordination of bishops: ‘Please turn back!’

Scripture

See all


The witness of the anonymous first martyrs of Rome

Standing together on solid ground

The surprising way that God heals 

Podcasts

See all


Father James Martin on meeting our moral heroes

Preaching the Gospel—not politics—at America’s 250th anniversary

‘I doubt he will be diplomatic’: What Pope Leo may say to the U.S. on July 3

Sections

  • Faith
  • Culture
  • Scripture
  • Politics
  • Vatican
  • Podcast

About America

  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Writing Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Jesuit Vocations

More

  • Donate
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Classifieds Directory

America Today

Your daily guide to the most important stories from the Church and around the world - delivered to your inbox each morning. See more newsletters

Sign up
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
© 2026 America Press Inc. | All Rights Reserved. Powered by Newspack
  • Donate

Gift this article