'A lively and thoroughly engaging collection. Every chapter comes at the question of contemporary money and finance from a new and often surprising angle. Provocative and energetic, the book has been assembled with wit and insight. The introduction alone is worth the price of admission, and the rest of the volume follows through on its promise.' Geoff Mann, Simon Fraser University, Canada

The 'critical juncture' of the 1970s marked the end of decades of seemingly inevitable progress towards more equal societies, and the resurgence of a financialised capitalism. This volume presents a range of critical perspectives that help to unwrap the mysteries of mobile financial capital.' John Quiggin, Australian Laureate Fellow in Economics, University of Queensland

During the recent financial crisis, the conflict between sovereign states and banks over who controls the creation of money was thrown into sharp relief. This collection investigates the relationship between states and banks, arguing that conflicts between the two over control of money produces critical junctures. Drawing on Max Weber's concept of 'mobile capital', the book examines the mobility of capital networks in contexts of funding warfare, global bubbles and dangerous instability disengaged from social-economic activity. It proposes that mobile capital is a primary feature of capitalism and nation states, and furthermore, argues that the perennial, hierarchical struggles between states and global banks is intrinsic to capitalism. Featuring authors writing from an impressively diverse range of academic backgrounds (including sociology, geography, economics and politics), Critical Junctures in Mobile Capital presents a variety of analyses using current or past examples from different countries, federations, and of differing forms of mobile capital.
Les mer
Introduction Jocelyn Pixley; 1. Sovereign nations and the governance of international finance Renate Mayntz; 2. Coping with the dangerous component of capital flows and Asia's ineffective cooperation Iwan Azis; 3. How mobile capital plays off democracy – the Euro case and other federations Jocelyn Pixley; 4. Mobile capital as the ultimate form of war finance Luca Fantacci and Lucio Gobbi; 5. Capital moves financially – securitisation, value – and the emergent social relations of labour Dick Bryan and Michael Rafferty; 6. International money after the crisis. What do we know? Herman Mark Schwartz; 7. Beware of financialization! Emerging markets and mobile capital Andreas Nölke; 8. Lagoon immobility. The exceptional case of imperial Venice Sam Whimster; 9. 'Convenient reverse logic' in mobile capital's inequalities Jocelyn Pixley; 10. Imagine: grassroots against financialization Helena Flam; 11. Money, state and capital: the long-term perspective Helmut Kuzmics; 12. Super diversity, exploitation and migrant workers Shaun Wilson; 13. The bitcoin or the reality of a waking dream Massimo Amato; 14. Capital mobility and the fragmentation of monetary sovereignty David Woodruff; 15. Surrogate currencies: Sardex Laura Sartori; Index.
Les mer
'A lively and thoroughly engaging collection. Every chapter comes at the question of contemporary money and finance from a new and often surprising angle. Provocative and energetic, the book has been assembled with wit and insight. The introduction alone is worth the price of admission, and the rest of the volume follows through on its promise.' Geoff Mann, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Les mer
Investigates relationships between sovereign states and banks, and their conflicts over the creation of money in government debt and mobile capital.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781107189515
Publisert
2018-03-08
Utgiver
Vendor
Cambridge University Press
Vekt
630 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
157 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
316

Om bidragsyterne

Jocelyn Pixley is an Honorary Professor at Macquarie University and Professorial Research Fellow with the Global Policy Institute. An economic sociologist, her fieldwork involves interviewing top officials in financial centres. She is the author of Emotions in Finance, now in its second edition (Cambridge, 2012), and edited a volume on the same theme entitled New Perspectives on Emotions in Finance (2012). With Geoff Harcourt, she edited the volume Financial Crises and the Nature of Capitalist Money (2013). Helena Flam is Professor of Sociology at the Universität Leipzig. Previous to this appointment, she assisted in setting up the Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study and was a Fellow at Max Planck Institute for Social Research in Cologne. She has written and organized conferences on transnational social movements, transitional justice and transnational financial institutions.