2024-03-29T13:49:49Z
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/cgi/oai2
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:24
2016-03-30T22:42:14Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/24/
Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS4291 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Science & Technology
BN Agency
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civil Society
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Class
BN State & Government
BN Comparative
BN Theory
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Trade
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN War & Peace
BN Data & Statistics
BN Distribution
BN Ecology & Environment
BN Growth
BN Hegemony
BN History
BN Ideology
BN Industrial Organization
BN Institutions
BN International & Global
BN Labour
BN Law
BN Macro
BN Micro
BN Methodology
BN Money & Finance
BN Power
BN Policy
BN Political Parties
BN Production
BN Region - Asia
BN Region - Africa
BN Region - Europe
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - North America
BN Region - Middle East
BN Region - Other
BN Region - Pacific
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
What is capital? Is it a material thing or social relation? What is political about it and how does it relate to power? What is the role of capital in the broader international political economy? The seminar examines such questions, both theoretically and historically. The first part deals with basic conceptions of capital, emphasizing the interaction between productivity and power, and examining how this interaction affected the evolution of transnational corporations. The second part looks at the changing relationship of business enterprise and states, illustrated for example by the three-way interplay between petroleum and armament firms, superpower confrontation, and Middle-East ‘energy conflicts.’ The third part focuses on the globalization of ownership and its domestic ramifications. Particular emphasis is put on the links between capital mobility and social transformation, such as the (re)capitalization of Russia, the Asian crisis and the changing ‘Asian model’, and the dramatic U-turns from ethnic conflict to transnational liberalism in South Africa and Israel.
2002
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/24/1/N020101_Y4291_%282001_2%29.pdf
Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS4291 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2002). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:25
2016-03-30T15:29:25Z
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74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/25/
Conflict, Militarism and Global Markets (YorkU, GS6230 3.0, Graduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Science & Technology
BN Agency
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civil Society
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Space
BN Class
BN State & Government
BN Comparative
BN Theory
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Trade
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN War & Peace
BN Culture
BN Data & Statistics
BN Distribution
BN Ecology & Environment
BN Ethnicity & Race
BN Growth
BN Hegemony
BN History
BN Ideology
BN Industrial Organization
BN Institutions
BN International & Global
BN Labour
BN Law
BN Macro
BN Micro
BN Methodology
BN Money & Finance
BN Myth
BN Power
BN Policy
BN Political Parties
BN Production
BN Region - Asia
BN Region - Africa
BN Region - Europe
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - North America
BN Region - Middle East
BN Region - Other
BN Region - Pacific
BN Religion
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
Does capitalism require peace and stability? Is armed conflict alien to markets? Do capitalists suffer from militarism and war? With the cold war over and liberalism being triumphant, many believe the answer is yes. Capitalism, so it seems, thrives on, and therefore promotes peace and stability. This view, though, stands in sharp contrast to the history of capitalism. In fact, over the past several centuries, the expansion of markets and capitalism was accompanied by an exponential increase, not decrease, in armed conflict and militarism. Have we now passed the peak of this process? Is the end of the cold war the beginning of true ‘capitalist peace’? Are ‘peace dividends’ here to stay? Perhaps. But it is also possible that conflict and militarism are not antithetical to capitalism, and that under certain circumstances, they may even be essential for its survival.
The seminar tackles these questions within a broader analysis of capitalist development, focusing primarily (though not exclusively) on the twentieth century. Drawing on various examples from around the world, it covers issues such as the connection between capitalism and war, political economy of military spending, socio-political aspects of militarism and institutionalized waste, peace and war as phases of accumulation, militarization and ruling-class formation, and the international political economy of the arms trade.
Views on these issues can be delineated along ideological lines. Mainstream approaches, geared primarily toward prediction and decision making, tend to follow the realist framework, separating economics from politics and accentuating the significance of formal structures and state officials. Critical theories of political economy, on the other hand, view the tension between markets on the one hand, and conflict and militarism on the other, as part of wider social context. The seminar traces the evolution of such theories from the early Marxist and institutionalist writings, through the post-war emergence of the Monopoly Capital school and Military Keynesianism, to research on the Military Industrial Complex and ‘peace dividends.’ The globalization of military industries, the arms trade and prospects for disarmament are assessed in light of theoretical debates.
2001
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/25/1/N010101_Y6230_outline_%282000_1%29.pdf
Conflict, Militarism and Global Markets (YorkU, GS6230 3.0, Graduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2001). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:26
2016-03-31T22:13:10Z
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7375626A656374733D414D
7375626A656374733D4158
7375626A656374733D4159
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/26/
Political Economy: Major Themes (GS 6272 3.0, Graduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Science & Technology
BN Agency
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civil Society
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Class
BN State & Government
BN Comparative
BN Theory
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Trade
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN War & Peace
BN Data & Statistics
BN Distribution
BN Ecology & Environment
BN Growth
BN Hegemony
BN History
BN Ideology
BN Industrial Organization
BN Institutions
BN International & Global
BN Labour
BN Law
BN Macro
BN Micro
BN Methodology
BN Money & Finance
BN Power
BN Policy
BN Political Parties
BN Production
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
At the dawn of the 21st century, more and more people realize that ‘economics’ and ‘politics’ are intimately related. And yet, these two aspects of social existence are usually studied as separate ‘disciplines,’ each with its own categories, language, and theories. Can this departmentalization be overcome? Should it? And if so, how? The seminar deals with these questions by critically examining major themes of political economy. Topics are divided into three major categories: (1) elements; (2) aggregates; and (3) global formations. In the first part, students examine closely the origin and implications of concepts such as supply and demand, equilibrium, utility and productivity, market organization, and the role of power. Part two, focusing on aggregates, covers the issues of national accounting, theories of prosperity and crisis, money and finance, economic policy, as well as ‘anomalies’ such as stagflation. The third part, dealing with global formations, examines trade, capital flows and exchange rates, imperialism, and different aspects of globalization. Throughout the seminar, the emphasis is not only on the ‘how,’ but also on the ‘why.’ Where have the concepts and theories come from? Why have they risen to prominence, and what brought them down? Who benefited from them and who paid the price? Do they help us understand the world, or do they serve to conceal it? In these explorations, special emphasis is put on methodology, as well as the importance of empirical/historical analysis.
2003
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/26/1/N030101_Y6272_outline_%282002_3%29.pdf
Political Economy: Major Themes (GS 6272 3.0, Graduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2003). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:59
2016-04-01T00:41:59Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/59/
Seven Lectures on Capital (TAU, Mini Course 1011.4670, Graduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Science & Technology
BN Agency
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civil Society
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Class
BN State & Government
BN Comparative
BN Theory
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Trade
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN War & Peace
BN Data & Statistics
BN Distribution
BN Ecology & Environment
BN Growth
BN Hegemony
BN History
BN Ideology
BN Industrial Organization
BN Institutions
BN International & Global
BN Labour
BN Law
BN Macro
BN Micro
BN Methodology
BN Money & Finance
BN Power
BN Policy
BN Political Parties
BN Production
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
What is capital? Is capital the same as machines, or is it merely a financial asset? Is it ‘material’ or ‘social’? Is it static or dynamic? Surprisingly, these questions have no clear answers. The form of capital, its existence as monetary wealth, is hardly in doubt. The problem is with the content, the ‘stuff’ which makes capital grow, and on this aspect of capital there is no agreement whatsoever. For example, does capital accumulate because it is ‘productive,’ or due to the ‘exploitation’ of workers? Does capital expand ‘on its own,’ or does it need ‘external’ institutions such as the state? Can capital grow by undermining production and efficiency? What exactly is being accumulated? Does the value of capital represent a tangible ‘thing,’ ‘utils,’ ‘dead labour’ or perhaps something totally different? What units should we use to measure its accumulation?
The course offers a critical examination of the concept of capital, the process of capital accumulation, and the broader implications of capital accumulation for understanding how capitalism works. The first lecture provides an overview of political economy. The next two lectures outline the two existing approaches to capital: the utility-based neoclassical view and the labour-based Marxist perspective. The last four lectures present an alternative power-based approach to capital.
2004-10
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/59/1/041001N_7Capital_%280%29_Course_Outline.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/59/2/041001N_7Capital_%281%29_PE_HO.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/59/3/041001N_7Capital_%282%29_Neoclassical_HO.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/59/4/041001N_7Capital_%283%29_Marx_HO.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/59/5/041001N_7Capital_%284%29_Power_HO.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/59/6/041001N_7Capital_%285%29_DK%26DA%281%29_HO.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/59/7/041001N_7Capital_%286%29_DK%26DA%282%29_HO.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/59/8/041001N_7Capital_%287%29_DK%26NewWars_HO.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/59/9/041001N_7Capital_%288%29_PaperTopics.pdf
Seven Lectures on Capital (TAU, Mini Course 1011.4670, Graduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2004). Eitan Berglas School of Economics. Tel Aviv University. October. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:113
2016-04-22T14:37:46Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/113/
The Iron Heel: A Life Story (עקב הברזל: סיפור חיים)
Bichler, Shimshon
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civil Society
BN Labour
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Law
BN Class
BN State & Government
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Crisis
BN War & Peace
BN Culture
BN Power
BN Ethnicity & Race
BN Hegemony
BN Region - North America
BN History
BN Ideology
BN Institutions
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
ג'ק לונדון נחשב כיום לסופר של בני נעורים. הוא ידוע בעיקר לקורא העברי מספרי ההרפתקאות שבהם תיאר את הצפון הרחוק, ואת מאבקם של גיבוריו, בני אדם וחיות, בטבע האכזרי ובסביבה הקשוחה. אולי התמימות והפשטות הנערית שממלאים את סיפורי ג'ק לונדון, הם שמקסימים מזה כמאה שנה דורות חדשים של קוראים, אולם יש לאמר שבזמן כתיבתם לא נחשבו הסיפורים נאיביים, וג'ק לונדון היה רחוק מלהיות סופר לילדים
מעטים יודעים כי ג'ק לונדון היה בזמנו סופר של רבי-מכר, שנקרא בלהיטות בעיקר על ידי 'מבוגרים', ושעיקר פרסומו בא לו דווקא מכתיבתו הפוליטית הקשוחה. יתר על כן, ג'ק לונדון היה בעשור הראשון של המאה-העשרים הסופר הנקרא ביותר בארה"ב, ואולי הפורה ביותר בכל הזמנים. בחייו הספרותיים הקצרים, שארכו כחמש-עשרה שנים, הוא הצליח להפיק מעצמו כעשרים ספרים, כמאתיים סיפורים וכארבע-מאות מאמרים; כל זאת, לצד חיים סוערים שכללו פעילות פוליטית ערה, פולמוסים ציבוריים, שעשועים, מסעות, אהבות מתוקשרות, גירושים שערוריתיים, הרפתקאות עסקיות, וניסויים מוזרים בחקלאות
כבר בעת כתיבתו של הספר, היה ברור לג'ק כי עקב הברזל ייגנז בתירוצים שונים ומשונים. ממכתבים לחבריו עולה כי למעשה הוא חיברו מתוך חשש שזה עלול להיות ספרו האחרון... למעשה עקב הברזל הוא סיפור חייו של ג'ק לונדון. הוא תיאור התנסותו החברתית, התבגרותו הספרותית, והשכלתו הפוליטית. אילו היינו נאלצים להגדירו, היינו אומרים שהספר הוא 'אגדה אוטוביוגרפית שנכתבה עבור מעמד הפועלים'
Carmel
2002
Book Chapter
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/113/1/020000B_Iron_Heel_A_Life_Story_%28Carmel%29.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/113/2/020000B_Iron_Heel_A_Life_Story_%28Preprint%29.pdf
The Iron Heel: A Life Story (עקב הברזל: סיפור חיים)
Bichler, Shimshon. (2002). In The Iron Heel. Jerusalem. Carmel, pp. 259-277. (Book Chapter; Hebrew).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:189
2016-04-01T22:11:01Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/
Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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 Power
BN International & Global
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 - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Micro
BN Policy
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.
2005
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/1/20050820n_4291_syllabus_2005_06.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/2/nitzan_y4291_1_pe_handout_2005.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/3/nitzan_y4291_2_neoclassical_handout_2005.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/4/nitzan_y4291_3_marxist_handout_2005.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/5/nitzan_y4291_4_veblen_handout_2005.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/6/nitzan_y4291_5_technology_handout_2005.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/7/nitzan_y4291_6_corporation_handout_2005.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/8/nitzan_y4291_7_dk_and_da_handout_2005.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/9/nitzan_y4291_8_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2005.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/189/10/nitzan_y4291_9_stagflation_handout_2005.pdf
Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2005). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:193
2016-04-02T15:25:38Z
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7375626A656374733D4158
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7375626A656374733D414A
7375626A656374733D43
7375626A656374733D4246
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7375626A656374733D414D
7375626A656374733D4147
7375626A656374733D58
7375626A656374733D50
7375626A656374733D4145
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74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/193/
Political Economy: Major Themes (YorkU, GS/POLS 6272 3.0, Graduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN Theory
BN Data & Statistics
BN State & Government
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Industrial Organization
BN Civil Society
BN Institutions
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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Ecology & Environment
BN International & Global
BN Power
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Money & Finance
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Micro
BN Policy
At the dawn of the 21st century, more and more people realize that ‘economics’ and ‘politics’ are intimately related. And yet, these two aspects of social existence are usually studied as separate ‘disciplines,’ each with its own categories language, and theories. Can this departmentalization be overcome? Should it? And if so, how?
The seminar deals with these questions by critically examining major themes of political economy. Topics are divided into two major categories: elements and aggregates. In the first part, the seminar examines the origins and implications of concepts such as supply and demand, equilibrium, utility and productivity, market organization, and the role of power. Part two, focusing on aggregates, covers the issues of national accounting, theories of prosperity and crisis, money and finance, economic policy, stagflation, welfare/warfare, and the global formations of trade, capital flows and currency regimes.
Throughout the seminar, the emphasis is not only on the ‘how,’ but also on the ‘why.’ Where have the concepts and theories come from? Why have they risen to prominence and what brought them down? Who benefited from them and who paid the price? Do they help us understand the world, or do they serve to conceal it? In these explorations, special emphasis is put on methodology, as well as the importance of empirical/historical analysis.
2006
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/193/1/nitzan_y6272_0_syllabus_2005_6.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/193/2/nitzan_y6272_1_pe_handout_2005_6.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/193/3/nitzan_y6272_2_trinity_handout_2005_6.pdf
Political Economy: Major Themes (YorkU, GS/POLS 6272 3.0, Graduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2006). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:195
2016-04-02T15:24:09Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D4143
7375626A656374733D53
7375626A656374733D54
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7375626A656374733D59
7375626A656374733D45
7375626A656374733D5A
7375626A656374733D414F
7375626A656374733D4159
7375626A656374733D4144
7375626A656374733D4247
7375626A656374733D4A
7375626A656374733D415A
7375626A656374733D57
7375626A656374733D4146
7375626A656374733D42
7375626A656374733D48
7375626A656374733D4158
7375626A656374733D44
7375626A656374733D47
7375626A656374733D4142
7375626A656374733D55
7375626A656374733D46
7375626A656374733D4155
7375626A656374733D414C
7375626A656374733D4245
7375626A656374733D56
7375626A656374733D414A
7375626A656374733D51
7375626A656374733D4141
7375626A656374733D4D
7375626A656374733D4153
7375626A656374733D43
7375626A656374733D4246
7375626A656374733D4156
7375626A656374733D4C
7375626A656374733D414D
7375626A656374733D4148
7375626A656374733D41
7375626A656374733D4F
7375626A656374733D4147
7375626A656374733D4150
7375626A656374733D58
7375626A656374733D50
7375626A656374733D4149
7375626A656374733D4152
7375626A656374733D4151
7375626A656374733D4157
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
7375626A656374733D52
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/195/
Global Political Economy II: Issues and Problems Since 1945 (YorkU, AS/POLS 3275 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN Gender
BN Geography
BN 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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN Ecology & Environment
BN International & Global
BN Culture
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Myth
BN General
BN Demographics
BN Money & Finance
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Philosophy
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Religion
BN Micro
BN Policy
BN Ethnicity & Race
The course examines the global political economy as it developed since the end of Second World War. It deals with the general themes of power and production, order and disorder, finance, the international monetary system, international trade and the transnational corporation. It also explores various facets of capitalist expansion and crisis, including North-South relationships, development and underdevelopment, the impact of financial flows, the new wars and the future of the global political economy.
2006
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/195/1/nitzan_y3275_0_syllabus_2005_06.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/195/2/nitzan_y3275_1_order_disorder_handout_2005_6.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/195/3/nitzan_y3275_2_finance_handout_2005_6.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/195/4/nitzan_y3275_3_financial_instruments_handout_2005_6.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/195/5/nitzan_y3275_4_identity_politics_of_finance_handout_2005_6.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/195/6/nitzan_y3275_5_global_money_and_finance_handout_2005_6.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/195/7/nitzan_y3275_6_international_trade_handout_2005_6.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/195/8/nitzan_y3275_7_tnc_handout_2005_6.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/195/9/nitzan_y3275_8_pe_of_global_conflict_handout_2005_6.pdf
Global Political Economy II: Issues and Problems Since 1945 (YorkU, AS/POLS 3275 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2006). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:200
2016-04-02T16:15:36Z
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74797065733D6F74686572
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/200/
Letter to Shimshon Bichler on Esther Alexander
Orr, Akiva
BN Resistance
BN Theory
BN Political Parties
BN Revolution
BN Region - Middle East
Reflections on Esther Alexander and her time
2006-03-18
Other
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/200/1/20060318_orr_letter_to_bichler_on_esther_alexander.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/200/2/20060318_orr_letter_to_bichler_on_esther_alexander_web.html
Letter to Shimshon Bichler on Esther Alexander
Orr, Akiva. (2006). pp. 1-2. 18 March. (Other; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:208
2016-04-02T15:31:30Z
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7375626A656374733D46
7375626A656374733D4243
7375626A656374733D4242
7375626A656374733D4154
7375626A656374733D56
7375626A656374733D5A
7375626A656374733D414A
7375626A656374733D4141
7375626A656374733D4153
7375626A656374733D43
7375626A656374733D4159
7375626A656374733D4246
7375626A656374733D4C
7375626A656374733D4247
7375626A656374733D4A
7375626A656374733D415A
7375626A656374733D58
7375626A656374733D50
7375626A656374733D4146
7375626A656374733D4149
7375626A656374733D42
7375626A656374733D48
7375626A656374733D4158
7375626A656374733D44
7375626A656374733D47
74797065733D696E74657276696577
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/208/
Vi trenger er en teoretisk revolusjon (What we need is a theoretical revolution - An interview with Jonathan Nitzan in Norwegian)
Undem, Birgit
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Theory
BN State & Government
BN Region - Middle East
BN Hegemony
BN Institutions
BN Power
BN International & Global
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Revolution
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN War & Peace
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Science & Technology
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Methodology
BN Philosophy
BN Agency
BN Comparative
BN Resistance
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Class
Den vedvarende krisen i Midtøsten vil ikke kunne løses uten fundamentalt ny kunnskap som kan forklare dagens globale kapitalakkumulasjon, sier den israelske politiske økonomen Jonathan Nitzan – og tilbyr sin egen teori.
2006-08
Interview
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/208/1/20060814_undem_nitzan_interview.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/208/2/20060814_undem_nitzan_interview_web.htm
Vi trenger er en teoretisk revolusjon (What we need is a theoretical revolution - An interview with Jonathan Nitzan in Norwegian)
Undem, Birgit. (2006). Klassekampen. August. pp. 10-11. (Interview; Other).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:209
2016-04-02T15:16:35Z
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7375626A656374733D4243
7375626A656374733D4E
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7375626A656374733D4B
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7375626A656374733D45
7375626A656374733D5A
7375626A656374733D414F
7375626A656374733D4159
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7375626A656374733D4247
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7375626A656374733D415A
7375626A656374733D57
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7375626A656374733D42
7375626A656374733D48
7375626A656374733D4158
7375626A656374733D44
7375626A656374733D47
7375626A656374733D4142
7375626A656374733D55
7375626A656374733D46
7375626A656374733D4155
7375626A656374733D4245
7375626A656374733D56
7375626A656374733D414A
7375626A656374733D4141
7375626A656374733D4153
7375626A656374733D43
7375626A656374733D4246
7375626A656374733D4156
7375626A656374733D4C
7375626A656374733D414D
7375626A656374733D4147
7375626A656374733D4150
7375626A656374733D58
7375626A656374733D50
7375626A656374733D4152
7375626A656374733D4151
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/
Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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 Power
BN International & Global
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 - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Micro
BN Policy
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.
2006
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/1/nitzan_y4291_0_syllabus_2006.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/2/nitzan_y4291_1_pe_handout_2006.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/3/nitzan_y4291_2_neoclassical_handout_2006.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/4/nitzan_y4291_3_marxist_handout_2006.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/5/nitzan_y4291_4_veblen_handout_2006.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/6/nitzan_y4291_5_technology_handout_2006.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/7/nitzan_y4291_6_corporation_handout_2006.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/8/nitzan_y4291_7_dk_and_da_handout_2006.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/9/nitzan_y4291_8_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2006.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/209/10/nitzan_y4291_9_stagflation_handout_2006.pdf
Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2006). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:213
2016-04-03T16:06:24Z
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7375626A656374733D53
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7375626A656374733D4242
7375626A656374733D4154
7375626A656374733D4B
7375626A656374733D59
7375626A656374733D45
7375626A656374733D5A
7375626A656374733D414F
7375626A656374733D4159
7375626A656374733D4144
7375626A656374733D4247
7375626A656374733D4A
7375626A656374733D415A
7375626A656374733D57
7375626A656374733D4146
7375626A656374733D42
7375626A656374733D48
7375626A656374733D4158
7375626A656374733D44
7375626A656374733D47
7375626A656374733D4142
7375626A656374733D55
7375626A656374733D46
7375626A656374733D4155
7375626A656374733D414C
7375626A656374733D4245
7375626A656374733D56
7375626A656374733D414A
7375626A656374733D51
7375626A656374733D4141
7375626A656374733D4D
7375626A656374733D4153
7375626A656374733D43
7375626A656374733D4246
7375626A656374733D4156
7375626A656374733D4C
7375626A656374733D414D
7375626A656374733D4148
7375626A656374733D41
7375626A656374733D4F
7375626A656374733D4147
7375626A656374733D4150
7375626A656374733D58
7375626A656374733D50
7375626A656374733D4149
7375626A656374733D4152
7375626A656374733D4151
7375626A656374733D4157
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
7375626A656374733D52
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/213/
Global Political Economy II: Issues and Problems Since 1945 (YorkU, AS/POLS 3275 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN Gender
BN Geography
BN 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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN Ecology & Environment
BN International & Global
BN Culture
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Myth
BN General
BN Demographics
BN Money & Finance
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Philosophy
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Religion
BN Micro
BN Policy
BN Ethnicity & Race
The course examines the global political economy as it developed since the end of Second World War. It deals with the general themes of power and production, order and disorder, finance, the international monetary system, international trade and the transnational corporation. It also explores various facets of capitalist expansion and crisis, including North-South relationships, development and underdevelopment, the impact of financial flows, the new wars and the future of the global political economy.
2007
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/213/1/nitzan_y3275_00_syllabus_2006_7.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/213/2/nitzan_y3275_01_order_disorder_handout_2006_7.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/213/3/nitzan_y3275_02_finance_handout_2006_7.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/213/4/nitzan_y3275_03_financial_instruments_handout_2006_7.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/213/5/nitzan_y3275_04_identity_politics_of_finance_handout_2006_7.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/213/6/nitzan_y3275_05_global_money_and_finance_handout_2006_7.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/213/7/nitzan_y3275_06_international_trade_handout_2006_7.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/213/8/nitzan_y3275_07_tnc_handout_2006_7.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/213/9/nitzan_y3275_08_pe_of_global_conflict_handout_2006_7.pdf
Global Political Economy II: Issues and Problems Since 1945 (YorkU, AS/POLS 3275 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2007). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:214
2016-04-03T16:07:25Z
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7375626A656374733D4145
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74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/214/
Political Economy: Major Themes (YorkU, GS/POLS 6272 3.0, Graduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN Theory
BN Data & Statistics
BN State & Government
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Industrial Organization
BN Civil Society
BN Institutions
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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN International & Global
BN Ecology & Environment
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Money & Finance
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Micro
BN Policy
At the dawn of the 21st century, more and more people realize that ‘economics’ and ‘politics’ are intimately related. And yet, these two aspects of social existence are usually studied as separate ‘disciplines,’ each with its own categories, language and theories. Can this departmentalization be overcome? Should it? And if so, how?
The seminar deals with these questions by critically examining major themes of political economy. Topics are divided into two major categories: elements and aggregates. In the first part, the seminar examines the origins and implications of concepts such as supply and demand, equilibrium, utility and productivity, market organization, and the role of power. Part two, focusing on aggregates, covers the issues of national accounting, theories of prosperity and crisis, money and finance, economic policy, stagflation, welfare/warfare, and the global formations of trade, capital flows and currency regimes.
Throughout the seminar, the emphasis is not only on the ‘how,’ but also on the ‘why.’ Where have the concepts and theories come from? Why have they risen to prominence and what brought them down? Who benefited from them and who paid the price? Do they help us understand the world, or do they serve to conceal it? In these explorations, special emphasis is put on methodology, as well as the importance of empirical/historical analysis.
2007
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/214/1/nitzan_y6272_00_syllabus_2006_7.pdf
Political Economy: Major Themes (YorkU, GS/POLS 6272 3.0, Graduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2007). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:243
2016-04-03T15:41:06Z
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7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/
Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
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.
2007
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/1/nitzan_y4291_0_syllabus_2007_8.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/2/nitzan_y4291_1_pe_handout_2007_8.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/3/nitzan_y4291_2_neoclassical_handout_2007_8.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/4/nitzan_y4291_3_marxist_handout_2007_8.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/5/nitzan_y4291_4_veblen_handout_2007_8.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/6/nitzan_y4291_5_technology_handout_2007_8.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/7/nitzan_y4291_6_corporation_handout_2007_8.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/8/nitzan_y4291_7_dk_and_da_handout_2007_8.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/9/nitzan_y4291_8_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2007_8.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/243/10/nitzan_y4291_9_stagflation_handout_2007_8.pdf
Capital and Power in the Global Political Economy (YorkU, AS/POLS 4291 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2007). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:245
2016-04-03T16:08:11Z
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7375626A656374733D58
7375626A656374733D50
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/245/
Political Economy: Major Themes (YorkU, GS/POLS 6272 3.0, Graduate, Fall Term, 2007-8)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN Theory
BN Data & Statistics
BN State & Government
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Industrial Organization
BN Civil Society
BN Institutions
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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN International & Global
BN Ecology & Environment
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Money & Finance
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Micro
BN Policy
At the dawn of the 21st century, more and more people realize that ‘economics’ and ‘politics’ are intimately related. And yet, these two aspects of social existence are usually studied as separate ‘disciplines,’ each with its own categories, language and theories. Can this departmentalization be overcome? Should it? And if so, how?
The seminar deals with these questions by critically examining major themes of political economy. Topics are divided into two major categories: elements and aggregates. In the first part, the seminar examines the origins and implications of concepts such as supply and demand, equilibrium, utility and productivity, market organization, and the role of power. Part two, focusing on aggregates, covers the issues of national accounting, theories of prosperity and crisis, money and finance, economic policy, stagflation, welfare/warfare, and the global formations of trade, capital flows and currency regimes.
Throughout the seminar, the emphasis is not only on the ‘how,’ but also on the ‘why.’ Where have the concepts and theories come from? Why have they risen to prominence and what brought them down? Who benefited from them and who paid the price? Do they help us understand the world, or do they serve to conceal it? In these explorations, special emphasis is put on methodology, as well as the importance of empirical/historical analysis.
2007
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/245/1/nitzan_y6272_00_syllabus_2007_8.pdf
Political Economy: Major Themes (YorkU, GS/POLS 6272 3.0, Graduate, Fall Term, 2007-8)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2007). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:252
2016-04-03T19:34:57Z
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7375626A656374733D4152
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, AS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2008-9)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, it examines the evolution of different orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation as they pertain to the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2008
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/1/nitzan_y4292_0_syllabus_2008_9.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/2/nitzan_y4292_1_pe_handout_2008_9.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/3/nitzan_y4292_2_neoclassical_handout_2008_9.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/4/nitzan_y4292_3_marxist_handout_2008_9.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/5/nitzan_y4292_4_veblen_handout_2008_9.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/6/nitzan_y4292_5_technology_handout_2008_9.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/7/nitzan_y4292_6_corporation_handout_2008_9.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/8/nitzan_y4292_7_dk_and_da_handout_2008_9.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/9/nitzan_y4292_8_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2008_9.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/252/10/nitzan_y4292_9_stagflation_handout_2008_9.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, AS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2008-9)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2008). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:253
2016-04-03T19:35:50Z
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7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/253/
Political Economy: Major Themes (YorkU, GS/POLS 6272 3.0, Graduate, Fall Term, 2008-9)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN Theory
BN Data & Statistics
BN State & Government
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Industrial Organization
BN Civil Society
BN Institutions
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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Ecology & Environment
BN International & Global
BN Power
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Money & Finance
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Micro
BN Policy
At the dawn of the 21st century, more and more people realize that ‘economics’ and ‘politics’ are intimately related. And yet, these two aspects of social existence are usually studied as separate ‘disciplines,’ each with its own categories, language and theories. Can this departmentalization be overcome? Should it? And if so, how?
The seminar deals with these questions by critically examining major themes of political economy. Topics are divided into two major categories: elements and aggregates. In the first part, the seminar examines the origins and implications of concepts such as supply and demand, equilibrium, utility and productivity, market organization, and the role of power. Part two, focusing on aggregates, covers the issues of national accounting, theories of prosperity and crisis, money and finance, economic policy, stagflation, welfare/warfare, and the global formations of trade, capital flows and currency regimes.
Throughout the seminar, the emphasis is not only on the ‘how,’ but also on the ‘why.’ Where have the concepts and theories come from? Why have they risen to prominence and what brought them down? Who benefited from them and who paid the price? Do they help us understand the world, or do they serve to conceal it? In these explorations, special emphasis is put on methodology, as well as the importance of empirical/historical analysis.
2008
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/253/1/nitzan_y6272_00_syllabus_2008_9.pdf
Political Economy: Major Themes (YorkU, GS/POLS 6272 3.0, Graduate, Fall Term, 2008-9)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2008). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:265
2016-04-04T15:14:41Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D4143
7375626A656374733D4243
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7375626A656374733D4152
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, AP/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2009-10)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of different orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and study what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2009
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/1/nitzan_y4292_0_syllabus_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/2/nitzan_y4292_1_pe_handout_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/3/nitzan_y4292_2_neoclassical_handout_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/4/nitzan_y4292_3_marxist_handout_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/5/nitzan_y4292_4_veblen_handout_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/6/nitzan_y4292_5_technology_handout_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/7/nitzan_y4292_6_corporation_handout_2009_10.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/8/nitzan_y4292_7_dk_and_da_handout_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/9/nitzan_y4292_8_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/10/nitzan_y4292_9_stagflation_handout_2009_10.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/265/11/nitzan_y4292_10_11_capital_and_state_imperialism_and_beyond_handout_2009_10.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, AP/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2009-10)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2009). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:266
2016-04-04T15:11:45Z
7374617475733D756E707562
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7375626A656374733D4152
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/
The Capitalist Mode of Power: A Research Seminar(YorkU, GS/POLS 6260 6.0, Graduate, Fall Term, 2009-10)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capitalism is often understood as a mode of production and consumption. The seminar critiques this view and offers an alternative perspective of capitalism as a mode of power.
Thematically, the course consists of five parts: (1) Dilemmas of Political Economy: the two basic bifurcations separating 'politics' from 'economics' and the 'real' from the ‘nominal’, and how these dualities have gradually fractured political economy; (2) The Enigma of Capital: the liberal and Marxists conceptions of value and capital and why political economists still try to sort them out; (3) Capitalization: how discounting conquered the world while political economists looked the other way; (4) Bringing Power Back In: the history and theory of the capitalist mode of power; and (5) Capital as Power: a radical alternative to liberal and Marxists theories of accumulation.
Pedagogically, the seminar seeks to prepare students toward conducting their own independent research. Students are introduced to various electronic data sources, instructed in different methods of analysis and tutored in developing their empirical research skills. As the seminar progresses, these skills are used both to assess various theories and to develop the students’ own theoretical/empirical research project.
2009
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/1/nitzan_y6260_00_syllabus_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/2/nitzan_y6260_01_dualities_%26_fractures_ho_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/3/nitzan_y6260_02_neoclassical_theories_of_capital_utility_ho_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/4/nitzan_y6260_03_marxist_theories_of_capital_labour_ho_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/5/nitzan_y6260_04_what_is_being_accumulated_ho_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/6/nitzan_y6260_05_capitalization_ho_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/7/nitzan_y6260_06_accumulation_and_sabotage_ho_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/8/nitzan_y6260_07_the_corporation_ho_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/9/nitzan_y6260_08_modes_of_power_ho_2009_10.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/10/nitzan_y6260_09_dominant_capital_and_da_ho_2009_10.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/11/nitzan_y6260_10_breadth_ho_2009_10.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/12/nitzan_y6260_11_depth_ho_2009_10.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/266/13/nitzan_y6260_12_regimes_of_accumulation_ho_2009_10.pdf
The Capitalist Mode of Power: A Research Seminar(YorkU, GS/POLS 6260 6.0, Graduate, Fall Term, 2009-10)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2009). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:281
2016-04-01T18:51:58Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/281/
Call for Papers: "Crisis of Capital, Crisis of Theory"
Brennan, Jordan
Cochrane, DT
Starrs, Sean
BN Law
BN Gender
BN Geography
BN 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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN International & Global
BN Ecology & Environment
BN Culture
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Myth
BN General
BN Money & Finance
BN Demographics
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Philosophy
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Religion
BN Psychology
BN Space
BN Micro
BN Policy
BN Ethnicity & Race
BN Time
This is the first in a series of conferences in heterodox political economy, seeking to develop new ways of understanding capitalism and power. The conference will be held at York University in Toronto on October 29-31, 2010. The deadline for abstract submission is July 31, 2010.
2010
Other
NonPeerReviewed
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/281/2/20100323_forumoncasp_crisis_of_capital_crisis_of_theory_cfp.htm
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/281/3/20100323_forumoncasp_crisis_of_capital_crisis_of_theory_cfp.pdf
Call for Papers: "Crisis of Capital, Crisis of Theory"
Brennan, Jordan and Cochrane, DT and Starrs, Sean. (2010). (Other; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:288
2016-04-06T01:48:00Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/288/
Kapital als Macht und imaginäre Institution: Eine Einführung in die Kapitalmachttheorie von Jonathan Nitzan und Shimshon Bichler
Martin, Ulf
D'Alessio, Nestor
Wolf, Harald
BN Law
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Theory
BN Data & Statistics
BN State & Government
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Civil Society
BN Hegemony
BN Institutions
BN Power
BN International & Global
BN Culture
BN Business Enterprise
BN Revolution
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN Money & Finance
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Science & Technology
BN History
BN Ideology
BN Methodology
BN Philosophy
BN Agency
BN Comparative
BN Resistance
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Class
Mit ihrem Buch Capital as Power (2009) haben Jonathan Nitzan und
Shimshon Bichler eine radikale Alternative zu neoklassischen und marxistischen Wirtschaftstheorien vorgelegt. „Kapital“ begreifen sie im Rahmen ihres neuen Ansatzes nicht im engeren Sinn als ökonomische Größe, die - wie in der Neoklassik - in Nutzen-Einheiten oder - wie in der marxistischen Werttheorie - in abstrakter Arbeit gemessen werden kann, sondern als symbolische Quantifizierung gesellschaftlicher Macht. Diese Konzeption verspricht nicht nur, einen wichtigen Beitrag zum besseren Verständnis der aktuellen Krisenentwicklungen der Weltwirtschaft zu liefern, sondern sie hat auch interessante Berührungspunkte zum Konzept der imaginären Institution bei Cornelius Castoriadis.
Der diesjährige VSFA-Workshop soll die Möglichkeit bieten, den Ansatz von Nitzan und Bichler kennenzulernen, über seine kapitalismus - und krisentheoretischen Implikationen nachzudenken sowie nach den Verbindungen zum Denken von Castoriadis zu fragen.
2010-06-19
Other
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/288/1/20100512_vsfa_kapital_als_macht_und_imagin%C3%A4re_institution_front.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/288/2/20100512_vsfa_kapital_als_macht_und_imagin%C3%A4re_institution.pdf
Kapital als Macht und imaginäre Institution: Eine Einführung in die Kapitalmachttheorie von Jonathan Nitzan und Shimshon Bichler
Martin, Ulf and D'Alessio, Nestor and Wolf, Harald. (2010). 19 June. (Other; German).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:295
2016-04-06T01:18:56Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/
The Capitalist Mode of Power: A Research Seminar(YorkU, GS/POLS 6260 6.0, Graduate, Fall Term, 2010-2011)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capitalism is often understood as a mode of production and consumption. The seminar critiques this view and offers an alternative perspective of capitalism as a mode of power.
Thematically, the course consists of five parts: (1) Dilemmas of Political Economy: the two basic bifurcations separating 'politics' from 'economics' and the 'real' from the ‘nominal’, and how these dualities have gradually fractured political economy; (2) The Enigma of Capital: the liberal and Marxists conceptions of value and capital and why political economists still try to sort them out; (3) Capitalization: how discounting conquered the world while political economists looked the other way; (4) Bringing Power Back In: the history and theory of the capitalist mode of power; and (5) Capital as Power: a radical alternative to liberal and Marxists theories of accumulation.
Pedagogically, the seminar seeks to prepare students toward conducting their own independent research. Students are introduced to various electronic data sources, instructed in different methods of analysis and tutored in developing their empirical research skills. As the seminar progresses, these skills are used both to assess various theories and to develop the students’ own theoretical/empirical research project.
2010
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/1/nitzan_y6260_00_syllabus_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/2/nitzan_y6260_01_dualities_%26_fractures_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/3/nitzan_y6260_02_neoclassical_theories_of_capital_utility_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/4/nitzan_y6260_03_marxist_theories_of_capital_labour_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/5/nitzan_y6260_04_what_is_being_accumulated_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/6/nitzan_y6260_05_capitalization_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/7/nitzan_y6260_06_accumulation_and_sabotage_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/8/nitzan_y6260_07_the_corporation_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/9/nitzan_y6260_08_modes_of_power_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/10/nitzan_y6260_09_dominant_capital_and_da_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/11/nitzan_y6260_10_breadth_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/12/nitzan_y6260_11_depth_ho_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/295/13/nitzan_y6260_12_regimes_of_accumulation_ho_2010_11.pdf
The Capitalist Mode of Power: A Research Seminar(YorkU, GS/POLS 6260 6.0, Graduate, Fall Term, 2010-2011)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2010). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:296
2016-04-06T01:20:58Z
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7375626A656374733D4150
7375626A656374733D58
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7375626A656374733D4151
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, AP/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2010-11)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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 Power
BN International & Global
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 - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Micro
BN Policy
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of different orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and study what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2010
Course
NonPeerReviewed
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/2/nitzan_y4292_01_pe_handout_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/3/nitzan_y4292_02_neoclassical_handout_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/4/nitzan_y4292_03_marxist_handout_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/5/nitzan_y4292_04_veblen_handout_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/6/nitzan_y4292_05_technology_handout_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/7/nitzan_y4292_06_corporation_handout_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/8/nitzan_y4292_07_dk_and_da_handout_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/9/nitzan_y4292_08_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/10/nitzan_y4292_09_stagflation_handout_2010_11.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/296/11/nitzan_y4292_10_11_capital_and_state_imperialism_and_beyond_handout_2010_11.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, AP/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2010-11)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2010). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:297
2016-04-09T22:26:03Z
7374617475733D756E707562
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/297/
"Crisis of Capital, Crisis of Theory": Conference Program and Videos
Brennan, Jordan
Cochrane, DT
Starrs, Sean
BN Law
BN Gender
BN Geography
BN 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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN Ecology & Environment
BN International & Global
BN Culture
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Myth
BN General
BN Demographics
BN Money & Finance
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Philosophy
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Religion
BN Psychology
BN Space
BN Micro
BN Policy
BN Ethnicity & Race
BN Time
This is the first in a conference series organized by the Forum on Capital as Power and sponsored by Routledge and Springer. The present meetings explore the dual crisis of capital and theory. There are 21 scheduled presentations, including keynote addresses by Herman Scwhartz and Randall Germain and guest presentations by George Comninel, Leo Panitch, David McNally and Jonathan Nitzan. The conference closes with a roundtable interrogation of capital, power and the future of political economy. Attendance is free and all are welcome.
DATE/TIME/PLACE:
October 29-31, 2010 || York Lanes, Rooms 280N & 280A || Keele Campus of York University.
VIDEOS:
To watch the panels, click the link to the video podcasts above.
2010
Other
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/297/6/crisis_of_capital_crisis_of_theory_20101005_program_logo.jpg
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/297/3/crisis_of_capital_crisis_of_theory_20101005_program_web.htm
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/297/4/crisis_of_capital_crisis_of_theory_20101005_program.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/297/35/crisis_of_capital_crisis_of_theory_20101005_videos_web.htm
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/297/2/crisis_of_capital_crisis_of_theory_20101005_cfp.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/297/5/crisis_of_capital_crisis_of_theory_20101005_visitor_information.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/297/7/crisis_of_capital_crisis_of_theory_20101005_poster.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/297/8/crisis_of_capital_crisis_of_theory_20101031_synopsis.pdf
"Crisis of Capital, Crisis of Theory": Conference Program and Videos
Brennan, Jordan and Cochrane, DT and Starrs, Sean. (2010). (Other; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:309
2016-04-06T19:15:27Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/309/
Call for Contributions: "The Capitalist Mode of Power:
Critical Engagements with the Power Theory of Value"
Di Muzio, Tim
BN Law
BN Gender
BN Geography
BN 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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN International & Global
BN Ecology & Environment
BN Culture
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Myth
BN General
BN Money & Finance
BN Demographics
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Philosophy
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Religion
BN Psychology
BN Space
BN Micro
BN Policy
BN Ethnicity & Race
BN Time
POSTED BY TIM DI MUZIO:
The 2009 publication of Nitzan and Bichler’s Capital as Power: A Study of Order and Creorder has unsettled both heterodox and mainstream theorists of political economy, while igniting debate across the social sciences. Building on decades of research, their book offers not only a provocation to all political economists, but also a new approach to studying capital and capitalist sociality as a mode of power.
This collection, edited by Tim DiMuzio, aims to bring together scholars and practitioners interested in critically appraising and engaging with the work of Nitzan and Bichler, as well as researchers who use a power theory of value in their own work.
Contributions should be no longer than 8,000 words, including notes and references. Papers should be original (i.e. not published elsewhere), unless the author has explicit permission from the copyright holder to republish the piece in this volume. Contributions will be evaluated on their merit, as well as on how well they fit within the larger project.
Deadline for Submissions: June 1, 2011
Submissions are to be sent to: tdimuzio@hotmail.com
2011-01
Other
NonPeerReviewed
Call for Contributions: "The Capitalist Mode of Power: Critical Engagements with the Power Theory of Value"
Di Muzio, Tim. (2011). January. (Other; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:313
2016-04-06T19:15:46Z
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74797065733D6F74686572
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/313/
Call for Papers: "The Capitalist Mode of Power: Past, Present, Future"
Baines, Joseph
Hager, Sandy Brian
Ostojić, Mladen
BN Law
BN Gender
BN Geography
BN 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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN Ecology & Environment
BN International & Global
BN Culture
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Myth
BN General
BN Demographics
BN Money & Finance
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Philosophy
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Religion
BN Psychology
BN Space
BN Micro
BN Policy
BN Ethnicity & Race
BN Time
The annual conference series organized by the Forum on Capital as Power brings together a diverse range of radically minded people interested in exploring the concept of power as a basis for re-thinking and re-searching value, capital and accumulation. The second conference in this series will be held at York University in Toronto on October 20-21, 2011.
Keynote speakers: Bob Jessop, Michael Perelman and Randall Wray.
Extended deadline for abstract submission: July 31, 2011.
2011
Other
NonPeerReviewed
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/313/1/20110310_forumoncasp_the_capitalist_mode_of_power_cfp_extended_cm.htm
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/313/2/20110310_forumoncasp_the_capitalist_mode_of_power_cfp_extended_cm.pdf
Call for Papers: "The Capitalist Mode of Power: Past, Present, Future"
Baines, Joseph and Hager, Sandy Brian and Ostojić, Mladen. (2011). (Other; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:317
2016-04-06T19:08:46Z
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74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2011-12)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of different orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and study what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2011
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2011_12.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/2/nitzan_y4292_01_pe_handout_2011_12.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/3/nitzan_y4292_02_neoclassical_handout_2011_12.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/4/nitzan_y4292_03_marxist_handout_2011_12.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/5/nitzan_y4292_04_veblen_handout_2011_12.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/6/nitzan_y4292_05_technology_handout_2011_12.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/7/nitzan_y4292_06_corporation_handout_2011_12.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/8/nitzan_y4292_07_dk_and_da_handout_2011_12.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/9/nitzan_y4292_08_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2011_12.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/10/nitzan_y4292_09_stagflation_handout_2011_12.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/317/11/nitzan_y4292_10_11_capital_and_state_imperialism_and_beyond_handout_2011_12.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2011-12)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2011). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:320
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7375626A656374733D414B
7375626A656374733D52
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74797065733D6F74686572
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/320/
"The Capitalist Mode of Power: Past, Present, Future": Conference Programme and Videos
Baines, Joseph
Hager, Sandy Brian
Ostojić, Mladen
BN Law
BN Gender
BN Geography
BN 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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN Ecology & Environment
BN International & Global
BN Culture
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Myth
BN General
BN Demographics
BN Money & Finance
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Philosophy
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Religion
BN Psychology
BN Space
BN Micro
BN Policy
BN Ethnicity & Race
BN Time
This is the second in a conference series organized by the Forum on Capital as Power. The present meetings explore the capitalist mode of power. There are 26 presentations, including keynote addresses and guest presentations by Bob Jessop, Randall Wray, Michael Perelman and Jonathan Nitzan. Attendance is free and all are welcome.
DATE/TIME/PLACE:
October 20-21, 2011 || 9AM -- 7PM || Senate Chamber, N940 Ross Building, Keele Campus of York University.
2011
Other
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/320/1/20111020_forumoncasp_cmp_conference_logo.jpg
pdf
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/320/2/20110310_forumoncasp_cmp_cfp_extended_cm.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/320/3/20111020_forumoncasp_cmp_conference_programme_web.htm
pdf
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/320/4/20111020_forumoncasp_cmp_conference_programme.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/320/5/20111020_forumoncasp_cmp_conference_visitor_information.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/320/6/20111020_forumoncasp_cmp_conference_poster.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/320/29/20111020_forumoncasp_cmp_conference_videos_web.htm
"The Capitalist Mode of Power: Past, Present, Future": Conference Programme and Videos
Baines, Joseph and Hager, Sandy Brian and Ostojić, Mladen. (2011). (Other; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:322
2016-04-01T18:49:45Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/322/
Call for Papers: "Capitalizing Power: The Qualities and Quantities of Accumulation"
Cochrane, DT
Hynes, David
McMahon, James
Nitzan, Jonathan
Singh, Morgan
BN Law
BN Gender
BN Geography
BN 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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN Ecology & Environment
BN International & Global
BN Culture
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Myth
BN General
BN Demographics
BN Money & Finance
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Philosophy
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Religion
BN Psychology
BN Space
BN Micro
BN Policy
BN Ethnicity & Race
BN Time
Keynote speakers:
* Jeffrey Harrod, University of Amsterdam -- Global Weimarism: The Demise of Cohesive Global Power?
* Herman Schwartz, University of Virginia -- Intellectual Property Rights, Collective Action, and the Continuing Power of "Finance"
* Justin Podur, York University -- Nature, Capital and Commodification: Ecology and the Capital as Power Framework
* J.J. McMurtry, York University -- Community Capital: The Pitfalls and Promise of Local Power
* Jonathan Nitzan, York University -- No Way Out: Crime, Punishment and the Limits of Power
With the global crisis lingering, many now wonder how capital has become so powerful, and what should be done about it. Although we are eager to provide answers, the problem starts with the question itself: what exactly do we mean by ‘capital’, and what does it mean to say that capital is ‘powerful’?
The theme of the 2012 conference is the capitalization of power. The focus is the conversion of qualities to quantities: to theorize and research how the qualities of power – the multifaceted interactions of command and obedience, force and submission, violence and resistance – are universalized and discounted to the quantities of capitalization.
The conference will comprise two parts: public presentations open to all (September 28), followed by a closed workshop for the conference participants (September 29-30). The workshop will consist of longer presentations, allowing more time for debate, discussion and contemplation.
Financial assistance: we may be able to assist presenters by partly covering the cost of travel and accommodation. This possibility is still tentative; it is conditional on our ability to secure sufficient funding.
Deadline for abstract submissions: July 21, 2012.
2011
Other
NonPeerReviewed
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/322/1/20111200_forumoncasp_capitalizing_power_cfp_web_cm.htm
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/322/2/20111200_forumoncasp_capitalizing_power_cfp.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/322/3/20111200_forumoncasp_capitalizing_power_visitor_information.pdf
Call for Papers: "Capitalizing Power: The Qualities and Quantities of Accumulation"
Cochrane, DT and Hynes, David and McMahon, James and Nitzan, Jonathan and Singh, Morgan. (2011). (Other; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:332
2016-04-07T19:36:21Z
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7375626A656374733D4145
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2012-13)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of different orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and study what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2012
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2012_13.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/2/nitzan_y4292_01_pe_handout_2012_13.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/3/nitzan_y4292_02_neoclassical_handout_2012_13.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/4/nitzan_y4292_03_marxist_handout_2012_13.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/5/nitzan_y4292_04_veblen_handout_2012_13.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/6/nitzan_y4292_05_technology_handout_2012_13.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/7/nitzan_y4292_06_corporation_handout_2012_13.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/8/nitzan_y4292_07_dk_and_da_handout_2012_13.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/9/nitzan_y4292_08_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2012_13.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/10/nitzan_y4292_09_stagflation_handout_2012_13.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/332/11/nitzan_y4292_10_11_capital_and_state_imperialism_and_beyond_handout_2012_13.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2012-13)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2012). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:341
2016-04-09T22:23:10Z
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7375626A656374733D4241
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7375626A656374733D414B
7375626A656374733D52
7375626A656374733D4244
74797065733D6F74686572
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/341/
"Capitalizing Power: The Qualities and Quantities of Accumulation": Conference Programme and Videos
Cochrane, DT
Hynes, David
McMahon, James
Nitzan, Jonathan
Singh, Morgan
BN Law
BN Gender
BN Geography
BN 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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN Ecology & Environment
BN International & Global
BN Culture
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Myth
BN General
BN Demographics
BN Money & Finance
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Philosophy
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Religion
BN Psychology
BN Space
BN Micro
BN Policy
BN Ethnicity & Race
BN Time
This is the third in a conference series organized by the Forum on Capital as Power. The present meetings explore the capitalization of power. There are 24 presentations, including keynote addresses and guest presentations by Jeffrey Harrod, Herman Schwartz, Justin Podur, J.J. McMurtry and Jonathan Nitzan. The conference is sponsored by a SSHRC Connection Grant and York University.
Attendance is free and all are welcome.
2012
Other
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/341/1/20120928_forumoncasp_capitalizing_power_front.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/341/2/20120928_forumoncasp_capitalizing_power_cfp.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/341/3/20120928_forumoncasp_capitalizing_power_timetable_programme_web.htm
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/341/4/20120928_forumoncasp_capitalizing_power_timetable_programme.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/341/5/20120928_forumoncasp_capitalizing_power_visitor_information.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/341/6/20120928_forumoncasp_capitalizing_power_poster.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/341/7/20120928_forumoncasp_capitalizing_power_videos_web.htm
"Capitalizing Power: The Qualities and Quantities of Accumulation": Conference Programme and Videos
Cochrane, DT and Hynes, David and McMahon, James and Nitzan, Jonathan and Singh, Morgan. (2012). (Other; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:342
2016-04-09T22:10:43Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D46
7375626A656374733D4243
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7375626A656374733D47
7375626A656374733D4142
7375626A656374733D55
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/342/
The 1%, Exploitation and Wealth: Tim Di Muzio interviews Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan
Bichler, Shimshon
Nitzan, Jonathan
Di Muzio, Tim
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Theory
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Civil Society
BN Institutions
BN Power
BN Culture
BN Business Enterprise
BN Revolution
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Methodology
BN Agency
BN Resistance
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Class
BN Labour
BN Growth
Rethinking resistance, power and production.
2012
Article - Journal
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/342/1/20120900_bnd_the_1_percent_exploitation_and_wealth_recasp_front.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/342/2/20120900_bnd_the_1_percent_exploitation_and_wealth_recasp.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/342/3/20120900_bnd_the_1_percent_exploitation_and_wealth_recasp_web.htm
The 1%, Exploitation and Wealth: Tim Di Muzio interviews Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan
Bichler, Shimshon and Nitzan, Jonathan and Di Muzio, Tim. (2012). Review of Capital as Power. Vol. 1. No. 1, September. pp. 1-22. (Article - Journal; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:344
2016-04-07T19:12:25Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D46
7375626A656374733D4243
7375626A656374733D4B
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7375626A656374733D414A
7375626A656374733D4D
7375626A656374733D43
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7375626A656374733D414D
7375626A656374733D4A
7375626A656374733D58
7375626A656374733D50
7375626A656374733D4146
7375626A656374733D42
7375626A656374733D4158
7375626A656374733D44
7375626A656374733D47
7375626A656374733D4142
7375626A656374733D55
74797065733D61727469636C656D6167
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/344/
The 1%, Exploitation and Wealth: Tim Di Muzio interviews Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan (Reprint)
Bichler, Shimshon
Nitzan, Jonathan
Di Muzio, Tim
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Theory
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Civil Society
BN Institutions
BN Power
BN Culture
BN Business Enterprise
BN Revolution
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Methodology
BN Agency
BN Resistance
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Class
BN Labour
BN Growth
Rethinking resistance, power and production.
2012-10-02
Article - Magazine
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/344/1/20120528_bn_capital_as_power_philosophers_for_change_front.jpg
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/344/2/20120528_bn_capital_as_power_philosophers_for_change.htm
The 1%, Exploitation and Wealth: Tim Di Muzio interviews Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan (Reprint)
Bichler, Shimshon and Nitzan, Jonathan and Di Muzio, Tim. (2012). Philosophers for Change. 2 October. (Article - Magazine; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:368
2016-04-08T01:20:25Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D4143
7375626A656374733D4243
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7375626A656374733D414D
7375626A656374733D4147
7375626A656374733D4150
7375626A656374733D58
7375626A656374733D50
7375626A656374733D4151
7375626A656374733D4152
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2013-14)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of different orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and study what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2013
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2013_14.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/2/nitzan_y4292_01_pe_handout_2013_14.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/3/nitzan_y4292_02_neoclassical_handout_2013_14.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/4/nitzan_y4292_03_marxist_handout_2013_14.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/5/nitzan_y4292_04_veblen_handout_2013_14.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/6/nitzan_y4292_05_technology_handout_2013_14.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/7/nitzan_y4292_06_corporation_handout_2013_14.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/8/nitzan_y4292_07_dk_and_da_handout_2013_14.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/9/nitzan_y4292_08_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2013_14.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/10/nitzan_y4292_09_stagflation_handout_2013_14.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/368/11/nitzan_y4292_10_11_capital_and_state_imperialism_and_beyond_handout_2013_14.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2013-14)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2013). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:408
2016-04-09T01:12:10Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D4143
7375626A656374733D4243
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2014-15)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of different orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and study what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2014
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2014_15.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/2/nitzan_y4292_01_pe_handout_2014_15.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/3/nitzan_y4292_02_neoclassical_handout_2014_15.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/4/nitzan_y4292_03_marxist_handout_2014_15.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/5/nitzan_y4292_04_veblen_handout_2014_15.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/6/nitzan_y4292_05_technology_handout_2014_15.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/7/nitzan_y4292_06_corporation_handout_2014_15.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/8/nitzan_y4292_07_dk_and_da_handout_2014_15.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/9/nitzan_y4292_08_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2014_15.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/10/nitzan_y4292_09_stagflation_handout_2014_15.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/408/11/nitzan_y4292_10_11_capital_and_state_imperialism_and_beyond_handout_2014_15.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2014-15)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2014). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:421
2016-04-09T01:34:23Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/421/
Call for Papers: "Capital as Power: Broadening the Vista"
Germain, Randall
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN Gender
BN Geography
BN 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 Political Parties
BN Trade
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN Ecology & Environment
BN International & Global
BN Culture
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Region - Pacific
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Myth
BN General
BN Demographics
BN Money & Finance
BN Region - Africa
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Philosophy
BN Region - Latin America & Caribbean
BN Region - Europe
BN Religion
BN Psychology
BN Space
BN Micro
BN Policy
BN Ethnicity & Race
BN Time
The theory of capital as power (CasP) offers a radical alternative to mainstream and Marxist theories of capitalism. It argues that capital symbolizes and quantifies not utility or labour but organized power writ large, and that capitalism is best understood and challenged not as a mode of consumption and production, but as a mode of power.
Over the past decade, the Forum on Capital as Power has organized many lectures, speaker series and conferences. Our most recent international gatherings include "Capitalizing Power: The Qualities and Quantities of Accumulation” (2012), "The Capitalist Mode of Power: Past, Present and Future" (2011), and "Crisis of Capital, Crisis of Theory" (2010).
The 2015 conference seeks to broaden the vista. We are looking for papers that extend and deepen CasP research, compare CasP with other approaches and critique CasP’s methods and findings. Articles could be general or specific, theoretical or empirical, analytical or historical.
The conference is open to everyone, with submissions vetted entirely on merit. We accept applications from established and new researchers, in and outside academia. However, we are particularly interested in submissions from young researchers of all ages, including MA and PhD students, private and public employees and free spirits. If you have an interest in the subject and something important – or potentially important – to say, please apply.
Financial assistance: we may be able to assist presenters by partly covering the cost of travel and accommodation. This possibility is still tentative; it is conditional on ability to secure sufficient funding.
Deadline for abstract submissions: March 20, 2015.
2014
Other
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/421/1/20141100_germain_nitzan_casp_conference_2015_carleton_cfp_front.jpg
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/421/2/20141100_germain_nitzan_casp_conference_2015_carleton_cfp_web.htm
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/421/3/20141100_germain_nitzan_casp_conference_2015_carleton_cfp.pdf
Call for Papers: "Capital as Power: Broadening the Vista"
Germain, Randall and Nitzan, Jonathan. (2014). (Other; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:451
2015-09-05T15:32:43Z
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7375626A656374733D4152
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2015-16)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of different orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and study what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2015
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2015_16.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/2/nitzan_y4292_01_pe_handout_2015_16.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/3/nitzan_y4292_02_neoclassical_handout_2015-16.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/4/nitzan_y4292_03_marxist_handout_2015-16.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/5/nitzan_y4292_04_veblen_handout_2015-16.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/6/nitzan_y4292_05_technology_handout_2015_16.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/7/nitzan_y4292_06_corporation_handout_2015_16.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/8/nitzan_y4292_07_dk_and_da_handout_2015_16.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/9/nitzan_y4292_08_mergers_and_globalization_handout_2015_16.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/10/nitzan_y4292_09_stagflation_handout_2015_16.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/451/11/nitzan_y4292_10_11_capital_and_state_imperialism_and_beyond_handout_2015_16.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2015-16)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2015). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:470
2016-07-04T17:51:11Z
7374617475733D707562
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/470/
Theory and Praxis, Theory and Practice, Practical Theory
Debailleul, Corentin
Bichler, Shimshon
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Power
BN Production
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Class
BN Conflict & Violence
This working paper contains an intervention by Corentin Debailleul and an extended reply by Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan. The exchange was first posted on the Capital as Power Forum in January 2016. Debailleul’s original questions are articulated at greater length here, while Bichler and Nitzan’s reply is reproduced as is.
2016-02
Article - Working Paper
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/470/1/20160100_bn_theory_and_praxis_front.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/470/2/20160200_dbn_theory_and_praxis_wpcasp.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/470/4/20160200_dbn_theory_and_praxis_wpcasp_web.htm
other
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/470/15/20160200_dbn_theory_and_praxis_wpcasp.epub
Theory and Praxis, Theory and Practice, Practical Theory
Debailleul, Corentin and Bichler, Shimshon and Nitzan, Jonathan. (2016). Working Papers on Capital as Power. No. 2016/01. February. (Article - Working Paper; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:514
2017-09-17T04:28:12Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D4143
7375626A656374733D4243
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7375626A656374733D4152
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2017-18)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of different orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and study what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2017
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2017_18.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/2/nitzan_y4292_01_pe_handout.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/3/nitzan_y4292_02_neoclassical_handout.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/4/nitzan_y4292_03_marxist_handout.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/5/nitzan_y4292_04_veblen_handout.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/6/nitzan_y4292_05_technology_handout.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/7/nitzan_y4292_06_corporation_handout.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/8/nitzan_y4292_07_dk_and_da_handout.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/9/nitzan_y4292_08_mergers_and_globalization_handout.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/10/nitzan_y4292_09_stagflation_handout.pdf
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/514/11/nitzan_y4292_10_11_capital_and_state_imperialism_and_beyond_handout.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2017-18)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2017). Political Science. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:530
2018-01-08T14:37:43Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D414A
7375626A656374733D4158
7375626A656374733D4159
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/530/
The Tragedy of Human Development. A Genealogy of Capital as Power
Di Muzio, Tim
BN Power
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
BN State & Government
BN Value & Price
BN War & Peace
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Class
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
FROM THE BACK COVER: How might an objective observer conceive of what humans have accomplished as a species over its brief history? Benjamin argues that history can be judged as one giant catastrophe. Liberals suggest that this is to sombre an assessment and that human history can be read as a story of greater and greater progress in human rights, prosperity and the decrease of arbitrary and extra-judicial violence. But is there a third reading of history, one that neither interprets human history as a giant catastrophe or endless progress? Could we not say that human development has been a tragedy?
This book explores the idea of human development as a tragedy from the perspective of capitalist power. Although the argument of this book draws heavily on critical political economy, the analysis considers interdisciplinary literature in an effort to explore how major revolutions have transformed human social relations of power and created certain path dependencies that may ultimately lead to our downfall as a species. Intellectually sophisticated and readable, this book offers a provocative genealogy of capitalist power and the tragedy of human development.
Rowman & Littlefield International
2017
Book
PeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/530/1/2017_di_muzio_the_tragedy_of_human_development_front.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/530/2/2017_di_muzio_the_tragedy_of_human_development_toc_and_forward.pdf
The Tragedy of Human Development. A Genealogy of Capital as Power.
Di Muzio, Tim (2017). London and New York. Rowman & Littlefield International. (Book; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:539
2018-04-13T21:40:59Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D414A
7375626A656374733D414D
7375626A656374733D4158
7375626A656374733D4159
7375626A656374733D43
7375626A656374733D44
7375626A656374733D47
7375626A656374733D4A
74797065733D61727469636C656A6F75726E616C
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/539/
Theory and Praxis, Theory and Practice, Practical Theory
Debailleul, Corentin
Bichler, Shimshon
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Power
BN Production
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Class
BN Conflict & Violence
In their paper ‘The CasP Project: Past, Present and Future’, Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan invite readers to engage critically with their theoretical framework, known as capital as power (CasP). This call for further research, reactions and critiques is the perfect occasion to raise a few questions that have grown in my mind in reading Nitzan and Bichler’s work.
2018-04
Article - Journal
PeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/539/1/20180400_dbn_theory_and_praxis_recasp_front.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/539/2/20180400_dbn_theory_and_praxis_recasp.pdf
Theory and Praxis, Theory and Practice, Practical Theory
Debailleul, Corentin and Bichler, Shimshon and Nitzan, Jonathan. (2018). Review of Capital as Power. Vol. 1. No. 3. April. pp. 40-57. (Article - Journal; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:544
2018-07-20T23:34:58Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/544/
The Autocatalytic Sprawl of Pseudorational Mastery (version 0.12)
Martin, Ulf
BN Methodology
BN Philosophy
BN Power
BN Revolution
BN State & Government
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Culture
BN Institutions
According to Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan capital is not an economic quantity but a mode of power; it could be sumarized as: “Capital is power quantified in monetary terms”. So, what do we do when we “quantify”? What is the nature of “money” in a capitalist society? And, indeed, what is “power” in the first place?
In the following I will try to develop a concept of power as the ability of persons to create particular formations. The kind of formations persons can think of depends on the society a person lives in, which can be identified by what Cornelius Castoriadis called its social imaginary significations (SIS). The core SIS of capitalism is rational mastery operating with computational rationality. Computational rationality in turn rest on a particular understanding of how signification works: operational symbolism, as theories by Sybille Krämer (following Leibniz). When the concept of the SIS of modern rationality was developed in the 1950s and 60s, bureaucracy was seen as its main organisational mode or rational mastery. I will argue that capitalisation and bureaucratisation are the two modes of rational mastery which interact with each other. The paper concludes with deliberations on the future of rational mastery and the possibility of “ways out”.
2018-06
Article - Working Paper
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/544/1/20180600_martin_the_autocatalytic_sprawl_of_psudorational_mastery_v012_front.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/544/2/20180600_martin_the_autocatalytic_sprawl_of_psudorational_mastery_v012.pdf
The Autocatalytic Sprawl of Pseudorational Mastery (version 0.12)
Martin, Ulf. (2018). Working Papers on Capital as Power. No. 2018/04. June. pp. 1-20. (Article - Working Paper; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:590
2019-04-08T16:35:45Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/590/
Literature and Political Economy: An Invitation
Bichler, Shimshon
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Methodology
BN Revolution
BN Theory
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Culture
Most people think of science and literature as distinct human endeavours. According to received convention, science is mostly about ‘mind’, whereas literature is largely about ‘heart’. Science, goes the argument, is by and large rational, literature primarily emotional. Science is about thinking, literature about feeling.
The practical implication of this duality is that many who consider themselves scientists – particularly in the so-called ‘social sciences’ and especially in ‘economics’ – pay little or no attention to belles-lettres. As far as they are concerned, fiction, poetry and drama are diversions from serious academic work. Occasionally, when going on vacation or to an academic conference, they’ll throw a few cheap thrills into their handbag for ‘relaxation’. They’ll use them instead of sleeping pills after they are done surfing their phones and zapping their telescreen’s channels.
Now, it is true the that line between creative belles-lettres and capitalized cheap thrills has blurred in recent decades – so much so that it’s sometimes difficult to tell them apart. And it is also true that as the number of new novels exploded, their average quality plummeted.
But these shifting patterns are secondary. There is no need to read Leon Trotsky’s path-breaking book on Literature and Revolution (1925) or C.P. Snow’s warning on The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution (1959) to realize that literature in general and novels in particular remain crucial for understanding – and occasionally affecting – the socio-scientific history of humanity.
2019-03-29
Article - Working Paper
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/590/1/bisociation.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/590/2/20190325_bn_literature_and_pe_rn.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/590/4/20190325_bn_literature_and_pe_rn_web.htm
Literature and Political Economy: An Invitation
Bichler, Shimshon and Nitzan, Jonathan. (2019). Research Note. 29 March. pp. 1-3. (Article - Working Paper; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:606
2019-06-27T00:25:28Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/606/
The Autocatalytic Sprawl of Pseudorational Mastery
Martin, Ulf
BN Methodology
BN Money & Finance
BN Philosophy
BN Power
BN Revolution
BN State & Government
BN Value & Price
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Culture
BN Institutions
* Winner of the 2018 RECASP Essay Prize *
According to Jonathan Nitzan and Shimshon Bichler (2009), capital is not an economic quantity, but a mode of power. Their fundamental thesis could be summarized as follows: capital is power quantified in monetary terms. But what do we do when we quantify? What is the nature of money in a capitalist society? Indeed, what is power? In the following, we try to develop a concept of power as the ability of persons to create particular formations against resistance. The kinds of formations persons can think of depend on the society they live in, which can be identified by what Cornelius Castoriadis called its social imaginary significations (SIS). The core SIS of capitalism is rational mastery operating with computational rationality. Computational rationality in turn rests on a particular understanding of how signification works: it works through operational symbolism, as theorized by Sybille Krämer in analyzing the philosophy of Leibniz. When the concept of the SIS of modern rationality was developed in the 1950s and 1960s, bureaucracy was seen as the main organizational mode of rational mastery. We argue that there are two modes of rational mastery, capitalization and bureaucratization, that interact with each other in capitalist society. The paper concludes with deliberations on the future of rational mastery and possible ways out.
---
FRONT PICTURE: International Space Station Expedition 26 Crew (24 Dec 2010), Montreal at Night. Astronaut photograph ISS026-E-12474 (https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/48471/montreal-at-night). Image courtesy of the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, NASA Johnson Space Center (https://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/)
---
BIO: The author studied physics and informatics, along with a lot of philosophy, but is also interested in many other subjects. He came across Bichler and Nitzan’s Capital as Power in the first decade of the twenty-first century when he was politically active in various ways. He rediscovered Castoriadis through one of Bichler and Nitzans’s works. Since then, he has tried to understand what Bichler and Nitzan actually mean by power. As there is no concrete answer to this question, he has been trying to develop one by (con)fusing concepts developed by Castoriadis and other thinkers with some of his own.
2019-05
Article - Journal
PeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/606/1/20190500_martin_the_autocatalytic_sprawl_of_pseudorational_mastery_recasp_front.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/606/2/20190500_martin_the_autocatalytic_sprawl_of_pseudorational_mastery_recasp.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/606/4/20190500_martin_the_autocatalytic_sprawl_of_pseudorational_mastery_recasp.html
other
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/606/5/20190500_martin_the_autocatalytic_sprawl_of_pseudorational_mastery_recasp.epub
The Autocatalytic Sprawl of Pseudorational Mastery
Martin, Ulf. (2019). Review of Capital as Power. Vol. 1. No. 4. May. pp. 1-30. (Article - Journal; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:611
2019-07-15T01:54:25Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/611/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2019-20)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of different orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and study what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2019
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/611/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2019_20.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2019-20)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2019). Department of Politics. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:662
2020-12-02T01:13:14Z
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7375626A656374733D4156
7375626A656374733D4C
7375626A656374733D414D
7375626A656374733D4147
7375626A656374733D4150
7375626A656374733D58
7375626A656374733D50
7375626A656374733D4151
7375626A656374733D4152
7375626A656374733D4145
7375626A656374733D414B
74797065733D636F75727365
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/662/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2020-21)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and explores what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2020
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/662/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2020_21.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2020-21)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2020). Department of Politics. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:665
2020-12-31T01:58:35Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/665/
Power -- Transcript and Video
Baryon, Daniel
BN Philosophy
BN Power
BN Production
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
BN State & Government
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Culture
BN History
BN Ideology
BN Institutions
In the book Walden, Henry David Thoreau famously wrote that “there are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root.” And this is no accident. The structure of society, far from being easily interpretable, is purposely made opaque to us. Many veils are laid over the complex foundations of tyranny, many justifications which go unnoticed are marshalled to great success in confusing and distracting the people.
Philosophical ideas are the mental scaffolding that hold entire orders in place. The detours into philosophical analysis seen throughout political theory are not idle meanderings; they are the natural procession of political questions taken to their extent. This is why, early on in his Manifesto for a Democratic Civilization, Abdullah Ocalan says that “mighty social struggles are fought beneath the surface.” Enduring systems of thought and meaning silently underlie society’s functioning, giving it justification, forming its basic assumptions, and organizing the lives of the people that populate it under a paradigm.
This essay will discuss a great behemoth that lays just underneath the surface, often glimpsed, but rarely inspected in depth. It is what we actually discuss every time our conversations wander to the topics of suppression and revolt, conformity and autonomy, anarchism and authority. In these we are summarizing a much deeper structure, skirting an issue which subsumes all these common ideas. Let us lay out a theory of power.
2020-12
Other
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/665/1/20201200_baryon_power_front.jpg
pdf
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/665/2/20201200_baryon_power.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/665/3/20201200_baryon_power.html
other
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/665/4/20201200_baryon_power.epub
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/665/6/20201200_baryon_power_video.htm
Power -- Transcript and Video
Baryon, Daniel. (2020). The Anarchist Library. pp. 1-15. December. (Other; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:667
2021-01-13T17:42:06Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/667/
Fight to Win! Tools for Confronting Capital
Monaghan, Jeffrey
Cochrane, DT
BN Power
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
BN Agency
BN Value & Price
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civil Society
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
Anarchists have generally rejected the idea that there is or ought to be a pure or inherently revolutionary strategy or tactic. In this chapter we make use of the capital-as-power theory of value and capital in a way that informs and supports the ad hoc perspective on struggle and fighting to win. Our primary purpose is to propose a method based on this theory as a means for social justice activists to assess political-economic disruption campaigns (PEDCs). Such an analysis is a needed component of an anarchist economics.
AK Press
Shannon, Deric
Nocella II, Anthony J.
Asimakopoulos, John
2012
Book Chapter
PeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/667/1/monaghan_cochrane_2012_fight_to_win_front.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/667/2/monaghan_cochrane_2012_fight_to_win.pdf
Fight to Win! Tools for Confronting Capital
Monaghan, Jeffrey and Cochrane, DT. (2012). In The Accumulation of Freedom: Writings on Anarchist Economics. Edited by Shannon, Deric and Nocella II, Anthony J. and Asimakopoulos, John. Oakland, CA. AK Press, pp. 95-116. (Book Chapter; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:701
2021-09-09T22:47:12Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/701/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2021-22)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and explores what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2021
Course
NonPeerReviewed
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/701/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2021-22.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2021-22)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2021). Department of Politics. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:770
2023-03-05T13:28:59Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/770/
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2022-23)
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN Law
BN 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
DESCRIPTION AND OBJECTIVES. Capital is the central power institution of capitalism: iCapital is the central power institution of capitalism: it is the main force underlying the relentless transformation of power relations in capitalist societies. The course explores the accumulation of capital from three interrelated perspectives: conceptual, historical and empirical. At the conceptual level, the course examines the evolution of orthodox and critical theories of value and how these theories serve to explain and justify contending notions of accumulation. At the historical level, it traces the development of capital from its humble pre-capitalist origins to its present world dominance. At the empirical level, it studies and juxtaposes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of capital accumulation and explores what they mean for the contemporary political economy. In parallel to these explorations, the course introduces students to the art and science of empirical research. By the end of the course, students are expected to be able to develop and integrate theoretical arguments with their own empirical work.
2022
Course
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/770/1/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2022_23_front.JPG
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/770/2/nitzan_y4292_00_syllabus_2022_23.pdf
Political Economy of Capital Accumulation (YorkU, LAPS/POLS 4292 6.0, Undergraduate, Fall Term, 2022-23)
Nitzan, Jonathan. (2022). Department of Politics. York University. (Course; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:778
2023-07-17T19:05:43Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/778/
A Modern Anarchism (Part 1): Anarchist Analysis
Baryon, Daniel
BN Philosophy
BN Power
BN Production
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
BN State & Government
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Culture
BN History
BN Ideology
BN Institutions
We stand now at a turning point, wherein many roads sprawl out in front of us. With unprecedented access to information, the atlas seems to lie within our hands. But, at this crossroads, the popularizers of these many paths shout over one another to persuade new travelers, only to find that most travelers now choose tourism rather than migration; exploration rather than arrival. It is hard to blame them. Having seen many return from a path leading to a dead-end, or worse, having lost those they know to a terrible bramble from which they will never escape, these weary travelers are paralyzed by choice. Confused and discouraged, many simply return home where a tormentor awaits, but wherein there is no longer the stress of uncertainty.
I would like to tell you of a new path: its extent not yet fully explored, but peering through the forestation beyond, a great light emanates forth. Before we proceed, I would like to pose a question: why has this society accumulated so much power, yet somehow fails to meet the most basic needs of humanity? Why has this hierarchical structure changed hands between so many rulers, yet the peace they have promised never lasts? Their hands bloody, their adherents marching behind, a new society of domination always follows in time. Why? Those intent on creating their own societies of domination will offer all manner of empty excuses. But the true answers lie within an ideology which has been suppressed by the power hoarders: anarchism.
This work is not meant to be a brief introduction to the topic. There are plenty of those already in existence. Instead, I want to offer a modern synthesis of anarchist ideas. So, whereas many other books and essays endeavor to give a broad, non-committal overview, here I want to ground you in a particular location within the body of anarchist thought. In doing this, we will not wander down every trail, but we will stop to look at the scenery from time to time. And, for this reason, one might see this work as motivated by the impulse described by Voline in his work On Synthesis :
“The anarchist conception must be synthetic: it must seek to become the great living syn-thesis of the different elements of life, established by scientific analysis and rendered fruitful by the synthesis of our ideas, our aspirations and the bits of truth that we have succeeded in discovering; it must do it if it wishes to be that precursor of truth, that true and undistorted factor, not bankrupting of human liberation and progress, which the dozens of sullen, narrow and fossilized ‘isms’ obviously cannot become.”
Such a process is, of course, a lofty goal for any one person to carry out. To do this, I will go beyond the standard list of European thinkers that one is typically introduced to when they begin an inspection of this subject. These names will certainly feature in our narrative, as they were very important figures in the development of anarchism as a revolutionary movement. But the ideas of the anarchists are not only important to some specific geographic region. Now, more than ever before, anarchism has achieved a state of critical insight, especially as it has been informed by the work of Black, queer, indigenous, feminist, decolonial, and other anarchist thinkers.
All those people who strive to be free of oppression will find their common struggle within its basis. After all, many of these realizations root to the earliest stages of humanity and will likely be at play in any possible human society. Many other anarchist works have failed to take into account these new developments of anarchist theory, to understand where the original struggles have fallen short, and then cooperate alongside this new coalition of thinkers in bringing anarchist principles to their highest culmination.
So let us begin...
2023-03-16
Article - Magazine
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/778/1/20230316_baryon_modern_anarchism_part_1_anarchist_analysis_front.JPG
pdf
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/778/2/20230316_baryon_modern_anarchism_part_1_anarchist_analysis.pdf
html
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/778/3/20230316_baryon_modern_anarchism_part_1_anarchist_analysis.htm
A Modern Anarchism (Part 1): Anarchist Analysis
Baryon, Daniel. (2023). Libcom.org. March. pp. 1-24. (Article - Magazine; English).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:794
2023-11-21T18:02:38Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/794/
"על חמישים שנות בדידות: ספרו של אודי אדיב "המהפכה שלא הייתה (Fifty Years of Solitude: Udi Adiv's Book "The Revolution that Never Was")
Bichler, Shimshon
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN International & Global
BN Labour
BN Region - Middle East
BN Religion
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
BN War & Peace
BN Class
BN Comparative
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Crisis
BN Ideology
בליל חורף קר של שנת 1972 פרצו כעשרים אנשי שב"כ ומשטרה לדירה בהדר הכרמל בחיפה ועצרו את אודי אדיב וחברתו, לאה לשם. כך נפתח ספר הזיכרונות של אודי אדיב, המהפכה שלא הייתה.
זאת הייתה תחילתה של פרשה מתוקשרת אשר הגיעה לשיאה במשפטים שנערכו לחברי "הרשת היהודית-ערבית", שבסופם אודי אדיב נמצא אשם בין השאר בבגידה ובריגול ונשלח למאסר ממושך של 17 שנה (שהוקלו מאוחר יותר ל-12 שנים).
שרשרת המעצרים ומשפטי הראווה של אודי וחבריו זכו לסיקור יומיומי מנופח מצד כלל אגפי התקשורת הישראלית של אותה תקופה. יש לזכור כי נפלאות התבונה האינטרנטית טרם התגלו, ורשתות המחשבה הלא מגויסת עדיין לא הומצאו. עיקרי התקשורת היו אז עיתונות כתובה, מפלגתית ו"לא מפלגתית", שלוש תחנות רדיו בבעלות ממשלתית ישירה וערוץ טלוויזיה ממלכתי אחד פטריוטי גאה, שנאשם תדיר על ידי מפלגות הליכוד, המתנחלים והחרדים ב"שמאלנות". אבל במקרה זה נוצר לראשונה בישראל קונצנזוס חמים מימין וממה שכינו אז שמאל: אדיב וחבריו הינם סמל ומשל לאויבי העם, אוהבי ערבים, קומוניסטים שונאי ישראל. הם תוצאת החינוך המתקדם כביכול של הקיבוצים השמאלנים. הם "תלושים מערכי היהדות" וסובלים מ"שנאה עצמית". התברר גם שמקור הרעה הוא תנועת "מצפן" הבוגדנית. ממנה צמחו העשבים השוטים.
עד מהרה הפך המשפט למסע הסתה נגד כל דעה המעזה לבקר את עצם מדיניות החוץ והביטחון הישראלית, התוהה אחר מדיניות הכיבוש וההתנחלויות שניהלה אז ממשלת מפלגת העבודה, המטילה ספק בהיסטוריה הציונית הרשמית, או המזכירה חלילה את קיומה של האומה הפלסטינית, שלא לדבר על רמז לניסיון הידברות מדינית עם נציגי התנועות הפוליטיות הפלסטיניות….
2023-08
Review
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/794/1/20230800_bn_fifty_years_of_solitude_front.jpg
pdf
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/794/2/20230800_bn_fifty_years_of_solitude.pdf
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/794/4/20230800_bn_fifty_years_of_solitude_web.htm
"על חמישים שנות בדידות: ספרו של אודי אדיב "המהפכה שלא הייתה (Fifty Years of Solitude: Udi Adiv's Book "The Revolution that Never Was")
Bichler, Shimshon and Nitzan, Jonathan. (2023). August. pp. 1-5. (Review; Hebrew).
oai:bnarchives.yorku.ca:795
2023-08-30T21:40:24Z
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https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/795/
חשבתי שאטוס לדמשק ואעשה שינוי: אודי אדיב והמהפכה שלא היתה (I Thought I Would Fly to Damascus and Bring Change: Udi Adiv and the Revolution that Never Was)
Bichler, Shimshon
Nitzan, Jonathan
BN International & Global
BN Labour
BN Region - Middle East
BN Religion
BN Resistance
BN Revolution
BN War & Peace
BN Class
BN Comparative
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Crisis
BN Ideology
*** המאמר עבר עיסוי לשוני על ידי העורך: מומלץ לקרוא את הגירסה המקורית ***
בליל חורף קר של שנת 1972 פרצו כעשרים אנשי שב"כ ומשטרה לדירה בהדר הכרמל בחיפה ועצרו את אודי אדיב וחברתו, לאה לשם. כך נפתח ספר הזיכרונות של אודי אדיב, המהפכה שלא הייתה.
זאת הייתה תחילתה של פרשה מתוקשרת אשר הגיעה לשיאה במשפטים שנערכו לחברי "הרשת היהודית-ערבית", שבסופם אודי אדיב נמצא אשם בין השאר בבגידה ובריגול ונשלח למאסר ממושך של 17 שנה (שהוקלו מאוחר יותר ל-12 שנים).
שרשרת המעצרים ומשפטי הראווה של אודי וחבריו זכו לסיקור יומיומי מנופח מצד כלל אגפי התקשורת הישראלית של אותה תקופה. יש לזכור כי נפלאות התבונה האינטרנטית טרם התגלו, ורשתות המחשבה הלא מגויסת עדיין לא הומצאו. עיקרי התקשורת היו אז עיתונות כתובה, מפלגתית ו"לא מפלגתית", שלוש תחנות רדיו בבעלות ממשלתית ישירה וערוץ טלוויזיה ממלכתי אחד פטריוטי גאה, שנאשם תדיר על ידי מפלגות הליכוד, המתנחלים והחרדים ב"שמאלנות". אבל במקרה זה נוצר לראשונה בישראל קונצנזוס חמים מימין וממה שכינו אז שמאל: אדיב וחבריו הינם סמל ומשל לאויבי העם, אוהבי ערבים, קומוניסטים שונאי ישראל. הם תוצאת החינוך המתקדם כביכול של הקיבוצים השמאלנים. הם "תלושים מערכי היהדות" וסובלים מ"שנאה עצמית". התברר גם שמקור הרעה הוא תנועת "מצפן" הבוגדנית. ממנה צמחו העשבים השוטים.
עד מהרה הפך המשפט למסע הסתה נגד כל דעה המעזה לבקר את עצם מדיניות החוץ והביטחון הישראלית, התוהה אחר מדיניות הכיבוש וההתנחלויות שניהלה אז ממשלת מפלגת העבודה, המטילה ספק בהיסטוריה הציונית הרשמית, או המזכירה חלילה את קיומה של האומה הפלסטינית, שלא לדבר על רמז לניסיון הידברות מדינית עם נציגי התנועות הפוליטיות הפלסטיניות….
2023-08-30
Review
NonPeerReviewed
coverimage
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/795/1/20230800_bn_i_thought_i_would_fly_to_damascus_front.jpg
html
en
https://bnarchives.yorku.ca/795/2/20230800_bn_i_thought_i_would_fly_to_damascus.htm
חשבתי שאטוס לדמשק ואעשה שינוי: אודי אדיב והמהפכה שלא היתה (I Thought I Would Fly to Damascus and Bring Change: Udi Adiv and the Revolution that Never Was)
Bichler, Shimshon and Nitzan, Jonathan. (2023). Mekomit. 30 August. (Review; Hebrew).