Learning Outcomes:
By the end of this module students should have:
1. Developed an understanding of the political economy approach within economic geography
2. Connected the historical development of the capitalist economy to contemporary shifts in the spatial organization of investment, production, trade and consumption
3. Critically analyzed how issues like race, gender, citizenship status and location shape peoples' relationships to historical and contemporary patterns of labor and accumulation
4. Considered anti-racist, anti-colonial and feminist critiques of capitalism, Empire and globalization
5. Examined how the global organization of production and trade intersects with extractivism and the carbon economy
6. Explored alternative grassroots proposals for responding to our contemporary global conjuncture
Indicative Module Content:
This graduate module examines how race, gender, and other axes of difference shape contemporary geographies of capital investment and accumulation across the global economy. Indicative topics will include:
Key questions, literatures and concepts in economic geographic thought
Anti-racist and anti-colonial critiques of mainstream economic geography
Heterodox Marxisms
Genealogies of struggle and resistance to empire and neoliberalism
Critical geographies of economic globalization
Climate change, anti-racism and the degrowth movement
Feminist political economy