Nature, Capital and Neighborhoods: 'Dispossession without Accumulation'?
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Kappeler, Aaron (Author)
- Bigger, Patrick (Author)
Title
Nature, Capital and Neighborhoods: 'Dispossession without Accumulation'?
Abstract
The ongoing economic crisis, which originated in the USA and has since spread rapidly to capital markets worldwide, is massive, complex, and many times contradictory. One could say the same for responses to the crisis as governments, firms and multi-national institutions struggle to grasp the full magnitude of the event. This article interrogates the key commodities involved-land, labor and money-and the always-uneasy relations between spaces of social reproduction and capital. Such ambivalence is critical to understanding how new economic realities are formed in light of retreating neoliberalism as markets become destabilized. The analysis provided suggests the commodities involved in the housing crisis are the basis for a countermovement against dispossession.
Publication
Antipode
Volume
43
Issue
4
Pages
986-1011
Date
September 2011
Journal Abbr
Antipode
Language
English
ISSN
00664812
Short Title
Nature, Capital and Neighborhoods
Accessed
2017-06-28, 1:56 a.m.
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Kappeler, Aaron, and Patrick Bigger. 2011. “Nature, Capital and Neighborhoods: ‘Dispossession without Accumulation’?” Antipode 43 (4): 986–1011. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8330.2010.00757.x.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- capital market
- capitalism
- housing market
- international business enterprises
- labor
- labour
- MARX, Karl, 1818-1883
- mixed economy
- neoliberalism
- social aspects
- United States
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