This is Part 2 of an article arguing for an extended application of Karl Marx’s insight that the apparent reciprocity of free market exchange is to be understood as an ideology that obscures material processes of exploitation and accumulation. Rather than confine this insight to the worker’s sale of his or her labor-power for wages, and ground it in the conviction that labor-power is uniquely capable of generating more value than its price, the article argues that capital accumulation also relies on asymmetric transfers of several other biophysical resources, such as embodied non-human energy, land, and materials. Such a shift of perspective extends Marx’s foundational critique of mainstream economics by focusing on the unacknowledged role ...
This article discusses the main provisions of the Marxist theory of money in the context of modern t...
This research was funded by the National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research of Chi...
How does material production become socially recognised in capitalism? This is a fundamental questio...
This is Part 1 of an article arguing for an extended application of Karl Marx’s insight that the app...
Authors working on "industrial metabolism" or "social metabolism" look at the economy in terms of fl...
The concept of "use-value" and the question of the source of value in Marx's economics are analysed....
Unequal exchange is a common theme in two major global issues, uneven economic development and the ...
The purpose of this article is to attempt a conceptual reconstruction of Marx’s ecological doctrine ...
Some recent Marxist contributions, among them the so-called New Solution to the “transformation prob...
In this article, core tenets and claims of the theory of ecologically unequal exchange (EUE) are syn...
The article deals with the logical and theoretical structure of K. Marx's «Capital». In the «Theorie...
Marx's nineteenth century critique of political economy was developed in an era when natural resour...
THE LAST DECADE OR SO has witnessed considerableintellectual efforts within Marxism to develop coher...
This paper connects hitherto distant strands of literature to contribute to the ongoing turn to valu...
Capitalism (or, in general, the industrial system) advances into commodity frontiers because it uses...
This article discusses the main provisions of the Marxist theory of money in the context of modern t...
This research was funded by the National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research of Chi...
How does material production become socially recognised in capitalism? This is a fundamental questio...
This is Part 1 of an article arguing for an extended application of Karl Marx’s insight that the app...
Authors working on "industrial metabolism" or "social metabolism" look at the economy in terms of fl...
The concept of "use-value" and the question of the source of value in Marx's economics are analysed....
Unequal exchange is a common theme in two major global issues, uneven economic development and the ...
The purpose of this article is to attempt a conceptual reconstruction of Marx’s ecological doctrine ...
Some recent Marxist contributions, among them the so-called New Solution to the “transformation prob...
In this article, core tenets and claims of the theory of ecologically unequal exchange (EUE) are syn...
The article deals with the logical and theoretical structure of K. Marx's «Capital». In the «Theorie...
Marx's nineteenth century critique of political economy was developed in an era when natural resour...
THE LAST DECADE OR SO has witnessed considerableintellectual efforts within Marxism to develop coher...
This paper connects hitherto distant strands of literature to contribute to the ongoing turn to valu...
Capitalism (or, in general, the industrial system) advances into commodity frontiers because it uses...
This article discusses the main provisions of the Marxist theory of money in the context of modern t...
This research was funded by the National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research of Chi...
How does material production become socially recognised in capitalism? This is a fundamental questio...