Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan.
(2007).
Political Science. York University.
(Course; English).
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Abstract or Brief Description
What is capital? Is it a material thing or a social relation? What is political about it and how does it relate to power? What is the role of capital in the broader global political economy? The seminar examines such questions theoretically and historically. The first part explores basic conceptions of capital. It begins by studying three approaches to capital: one based on utility, a second based on labour value and a third based on power. The discussion then broadens to examine these three approaches in relation to technology, the corporation and the state. The second part of the seminar deals with transformations of capital. This part introduces the twin concepts of dominant capital and differential accumulation. Using these concepts, the seminar explores the historical processes of corporate mergers, globalization, stagflation, imperialism and the new wars of the twenty-first century.
Language
EnglishPublication Type
CourseKeywords
arms accumulation capital capitalism conflict corporation crisis distribution elite energy finance globalization growth imperialism GPE liberalism Marxism military Mumford national interest neoclassical neoliberalism oil ownership peace power profit ruling class security stagflation state stock market technology TNC Veblen violence warSubject
BN LawBN Theory
BN Data & Statistics
BN State & Government
BN Region - Middle East
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Industrial Organization
BN Civil Society
BN Institutions
BN Region - Asia
BN Revolution
BN Macro
BN War & Peace
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Science & Technology
BN History
BN Methodology
BN Agency
BN Comparative
BN Resistance
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Class
BN Labour
BN Growth
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Region - Other
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN International & Global
BN Power
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Money & Finance
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Region - Europe
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Micro
BN Policy
Depositing User
Jonathan NitzanDate Deposited
05 Sep 2007Last Modified
03 Apr 2016 15:41URL:
https://bnarchives.net/id/eprint/243Available Versions of this Item
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Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS4291 3.0, Undergraduate). (deposited 24 Sep 2004)
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Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate). (deposited 03 Dec 2005)
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Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate). (deposited 31 Aug 2006)
- Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate). (deposited 05 Sep 2007) [Currently Displayed]
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Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate). (deposited 31 Aug 2006)
-
Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate). (deposited 03 Dec 2005)
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