Rethinking racial capitalism: questions of reproduction and survival
Citations
83 citations
Cites background from "Rethinking racial capitalism: quest..."
...We draw on feminist political economy and scholars of race and ethnicity to show how capitalism articulates with and reinforces gendered, racialised, and classed oppression as – through labour migrants – difference is mobilised for accumulation (Balibar, 1991; Bhattacharya, 2018; Buckley et al., 2017; Ferguson & McNally, 2014; McDowell, 2015; Werner et al., 2017)....
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...…to show how capitalism articulates with and reinforces gendered, racialised, and classed oppression as – through labour migrants – difference is mobilised for accumulation (Balibar, 1991; Bhattacharya, 2018; Buckley et al., 2017; Ferguson & McNally, 2014; McDowell, 2015; Werner et al., 2017)....
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77 citations
Cites background from "Rethinking racial capitalism: quest..."
...Capitalism is racist (Bhattacharyya, 2018; Davis, 1971; Lorde, 2017) and the educational institutions that reproduce its ideology require rigorous critique, material challenge and co-ordinated collective action to build a movement for anti-racist scholar-activism....
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72 citations
Cites background from "Rethinking racial capitalism: quest..."
...…accounts to acknowledge the long-standing connections and the ways in which they were hierarchically constructed (particularly in terms of race, see Bhattacharyya, 2018; Virdee, 2019) comes to have greater significance as liberalism capitalism is understood to give way to state-managed domestic…...
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57 citations
Cites background from "Rethinking racial capitalism: quest..."
...This incorporates work on carbon debts (Simms, 2005), the colonial roots of ongoing exclusions and lack of recognition (Bhattacharyya, 2018; Nikiforuk, 2012; Patel & Moore, 2017) and “uncovering and explaining the racialized ways in which wealth from the exploitation of energy resources (and the labor involved in their extraction) underpins today's global energy economy” (Newell, 2021b: 1)....
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...This implies attention to the general dynamics of capitalism, industrialism and extractivism, but also how these interact with and magnify racial, gender, class and caste-based exclusions, for example (Bhattacharyya, 2018; Nikiforuk, 2012); an approach which invites attention to how particular instances of injustice relate to global processes (Sikor & Newell, 2014) and how these are also filtered through the political, social and economic processes and powers at the subnational levels, including those ostensibly set up to address climate such as global carbon trading mechanisms (Newell & Bumpus, 2012)....
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...This incorporates work on carbon debts (Simms, 2005), the colonial roots of ongoing exclusions and lack of recognition (Bhattacharyya, 2018; Nikiforuk, 2012; Patel & Moore, 2017) and “uncovering and explaining the racialized ways in which wealth from the exploitation of energy resources (and the…...
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...…industrialism and extractivism, but also how these interact with and magnify racial, gender, class and caste-based exclusions, for example (Bhattacharyya, 2018; Nikiforuk, 2012); an approach which invites attention to how particular instances of injustice relate to global processes (Sikor…...
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41 citations
References
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