Daniel McNeil is a British historian, public intellectual and cultural studies scholar specializing in Black Atlantic Studies, Diaspora Studies and anti-racist education. As of 2025, McNeil is the inaugural Stuart Hall Interdisciplinary Chair at the University of Birmingham.
Originally from Merseyside, England, McNeil has a B.A.H. from Oxford University. He earned an M.A. in History/Ethnic and Pluralism Studies from the University of Toronto, where he also received his Ph.D. in History in 2007.
McNeil is a Professor in the School of Social Policy and Society and the inaugural Stuart Hall Interdisciplinary Chair at the University of Birmingham.
Prior to joining Birmingham, he was a director of the Oxford Access Scheme Summer School (2001-2), a lecturer in Black and Minority Studies at the University of Hull (2007âÂÂ2010), a lecturer in Media and Cultural Studies at Newcastle University (2010âÂÂ2012), and a research fellow at the Wilberforce Institute for the Study of Slavery and Emancipation.
From 2012 to 2014, he served as the Ida B. Wells-Barnett Visiting Professor at DePaul University.
McNeil has also held visiting professorships and fellowships at DePaul University, where he was the Ida B. Wells-Barnett Visiting Professor between 2012 and 2014, and the Jackman Humanities Institute at the University of Toronto, where he was the inaugural Public Humanities Faculty Fellow in 2019âÂÂ2020.
In 2014 McNeil was selected as Carleton University's strategic hire in Migration and Diaspora Studies. He received two research achievement awards at Carleton and co-authored an eight-step anti-racism plan that gathered over 500 signatures from the university community.
From 2019-20, McNeil was the inaugural Public Humanities Faculty Fellow at the Jackman Humanities Institute at the University of Toronto.
McNeil is known for his work on migration, multiculturalism, and mentorship. His article, "Even Canadians Find It a Bit Boring: A Report on the Banality of Multiculturalism" (2021), was the inaugural recipient of the Editor's Award from the Canadian Journal of Communication, and he has been invited to provide advice, consultation and lectures on multiculturalism and anti-racism to the Department of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada and the Canadian Museum of Human Rights. He has also contributed to research handbooks that bring together the leading authorities on the most essential concepts, arguments, and research regarding multiculturalism from an international perspective.
McNeil is involved in public humanities projects, co-designing museum exhibitions, gallery events, and educational modules such as An Immigrant's Guide to Canada and Mapping the African Diaspora in Canada. In February 2015, McNeil delivered the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Intercultural Lecture at Elmhurst College titled "The Strange Eventful History of Young Soul Rebels". Between 2021 and 2025, he received three Black Excellence in Mentorship Awards from Queen's University and the Stuart Hall Outstanding Mentor Award from the Caribbean Philosophical Association.
McNeil's Thinking While Black has received reviews from scholars, curators and students of Black Studies and cognate studies of racism and racialization. Kamari Clarke, David Theo Goldberg, and Lawrence Grossberg have described Thinking While Black as an "important," "nuanced," "deeply informed," "lucid," "smart," and "wonderfully novel" analysis of the aspirations and achievements of Black Atlantic communities in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. In her review of the book, Antonia King regarded the book as "a necessary and innovative exploration of Black culture, Black disagreement, and debate." Nicholas Rickards regarded the book as an important resource for understanding the contributions of two intellectuals, Paul Gilroy and Armond White, within the context of Black critical consciousness and popular culture.