In this paper I first detail some of the geographical concepts that help us make sense of capitalism’s spatiality. I then provide several brief vignettes which illustrate how conflicts over how capitalism’s geography is made can be central to disputes both between and within groups of workers and capitalists. The paper’s purpose is to argue that understanding how social life is geographically structured can add important insights to explaining economic and political praxis
This paper offers a reinterpretation of what critical theorist Moishe Postone calls \u27the fundamen...
The spatial extension and deepening of capitalism has been a topic of interest to geographers, other...
The adoption of Marxism as a theoretical perspective and a political project in the 1970s was the si...
The line of scholarship dominating Anglophone geographers ’ approaches to studying economic geograph...
This book’s detailed exploration of the mutually constitutive relations between workplace processe...
The accumulation of capital has always been a profoundly geographical affair. Without the possibilit...
The aim of the chapter is to unpack trends around precarization of labour, while highlighting increa...
We introduce this special issue as a way of bringing insights from the radical geography emerging fr...
This short essay takes stock of where the field of \u27labour geography\u27 has got to and where it ...
Having spent much of the last two years researching European works councils and the prospects for la...
This short essay takes stock of where the field of 'labour geography' has got to and where it might ...
The chapter presents a sympathetic overview of labour geography in its various and evolving forms. T...
International audienceThe paper seeks to examine the logic relating the division of labor to globali...
This article recognises the contributions of workers and more broadly the significance of work within...
Intensive mobility of the factors of production (capital and work) is a major feature of the United ...
This paper offers a reinterpretation of what critical theorist Moishe Postone calls \u27the fundamen...
The spatial extension and deepening of capitalism has been a topic of interest to geographers, other...
The adoption of Marxism as a theoretical perspective and a political project in the 1970s was the si...
The line of scholarship dominating Anglophone geographers ’ approaches to studying economic geograph...
This book’s detailed exploration of the mutually constitutive relations between workplace processe...
The accumulation of capital has always been a profoundly geographical affair. Without the possibilit...
The aim of the chapter is to unpack trends around precarization of labour, while highlighting increa...
We introduce this special issue as a way of bringing insights from the radical geography emerging fr...
This short essay takes stock of where the field of \u27labour geography\u27 has got to and where it ...
Having spent much of the last two years researching European works councils and the prospects for la...
This short essay takes stock of where the field of 'labour geography' has got to and where it might ...
The chapter presents a sympathetic overview of labour geography in its various and evolving forms. T...
International audienceThe paper seeks to examine the logic relating the division of labor to globali...
This article recognises the contributions of workers and more broadly the significance of work within...
Intensive mobility of the factors of production (capital and work) is a major feature of the United ...
This paper offers a reinterpretation of what critical theorist Moishe Postone calls \u27the fundamen...
The spatial extension and deepening of capitalism has been a topic of interest to geographers, other...
The adoption of Marxism as a theoretical perspective and a political project in the 1970s was the si...