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Book ChapterDOI

Introduction: A Post-Colonial Critique of Capital Accumulation Today

TLDR
In this article, the authors look at how accumulation under post-colonial capitalism tends to blur various geopolitical boundaries of space, institutions, forms, financial regimes, labour processes, and economic segments, and creates zones and corridors on the other.
Abstract
The introduction makes three main points, which characterize this volume. (a) It looks at how accumulation under post-colonial capitalism tends to blur various geopolitical boundaries of space, institutions, forms, financial regimes, labour processes, and economic segments on the one hand and creates zones and corridors on the other. In this context, it draws our attention to the peculiar but structurally necessary coexistence of both primitive and virtual modes of accumulation in the postcolony. With increasing inflow of virtual capital in the form of offshore funds, venture business, hedge funds, Internet-based investment and banking, and forward trading, more people are forced to accept precarious work conditions in the unorganized sectors resulting in massive de-peasantization and creation of footloose labour, otherwise known as migrant or transit labour. (b) At the same time, family household becomes the new site of capitalist production and market system, which is different from what is assumed to be a site of non-capitalist production, something that is outside of capital. (c) The introduction also draws attention to what is now called affective labour that is to say labour actualized in the forms of care work and reproductive work. Affective labour leads to the conceptualization of affective value by focusing on the labouring body and subjectivity. Affective value is often mistaken to be essentially a cultural category, and not an economic category, in spite of its vulnerability to exploitation, thus becoming an element in the dynamics of capitalist accumulation. These three aspects taken together reflect on one of the principal features post-colonial capitalism, namely the overwhelming existence of informal conditions of production. These new forms of accumulation result in new discursive and political terrains of struggle. The chapters of the volume reflect from different discursive, analytical, and conceptual perspectives on these new forms of accumulation and unique modes of struggle.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Compliance Codes and Women Workers’ (Mis)representation and (Non)recognition in the Apparel Industry of Bangladesh

TL;DR: In this paper, women workers in Bangladeshi garment factories are misrecognised and not represented in the apparel industry through focussing on two enacted collective compliance measure agreements adopted by global brands to improve safety and working conditions.
Book ChapterDOI

Introduction: The Political Economy of Land and Livelihoods in Contemporary India

TL;DR: The major theoretical and empirical debates concerning the land questions under neoliberalism have been reviewed selectively from the perspective of a developing country like India as discussed by the authors, where the debates around the land-livelihoods linkages have been discussed from the vantage point of agrarian change and rural transformation under contemporary capitalism.
Book ChapterDOI

Security and the City: Post-Colonial Accumulation, Securitization, and Urban Development in Kolkata

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the interconnected issues of accumulation, securitization, and governmentality in the context of transformation of the city of Kolkata into a world-class metropolis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The long twentieth century: money, power, and the origins of our times

TL;DR: Arrighi argues that the history of capitalism has unfolded as a succession of "long centuries" - ages during which a hegemonic power deploying a novel combination of economic and political networks secured control over an expanding world-economic space as mentioned in this paper.
Book

Border as Method, or, the Multiplication of Labor

TL;DR: The Proliferation of Borders as mentioned in this paper is a seminal work in the field of political science that explores the role of borders in the formation and evolution of the modern world. But it does not address the problem of border control.
Journal ArticleDOI

From Servitude to Service Work: Historical Continuities in the Racial Division of Paid Reproductive Labor

TL;DR: In this paper, a study on African American, Latina, Asian American, and Native American women reveals the complex interaction of race and gender oppression in their lives, revealing the inadequacy of additive models that treat gender and race as separate and discrete systems of hierarchy (Collins 1986; King 1988; Brown 1989).
Book

Rethinking Capitalist Development: Primitive Accumulation, Governmentality and Post-Colonial Capitalism

Kalyan Sanyal
TL;DR: In this paper, a new political imagination for post-colonization world is proposed, based on the Ship of Fools and De-essentializing development: capital and governmentality.