CFP for a session/stream on


*‘Crises and contradictions of territorial economies and societies’*



RGS-IBG Annual Conference, Edinburgh, 3 July - 5 July 2012
www.rgs.org/AC2012



Convenors: Jamie Gough (Sheffield University) Raju Das (York University,
Toronto), Aram Eisenschitz (Middlesex University, London), Ozlem Celik
(Sheffield University)



The dominant strand of economic geography since the 1980s has been the
institutionalist approach, particularly prominent in the ‘new regional
economics’.  This has looked for sources of economic productivity and
innovation in non-market linkages between economic actors within and
between territories, which can be a basis for strong competitiveness, and
thus growth and stability, of territorial economies within a ‘globalised’
economy.  This offers the social democratic promise of benefits to both
capital and labour, and is a basis for their cooperation.  This approach
has occluded critiques of capitalism coming particularly from Marxism and
radical heterodox economics.  The latter traditions emphasise the
contradictory and conflict-ridden nature of all capitalist accumulation,
not least the ways in which strong investment, ‘competitive success’ and
growth undermine themselves; that is, these traditions emphasise the crisis
tendencies of capitalism.  Such analysis was strong in radical geography of
the 1970s, but has since been eclipsed.



The crisis of global capitalism which emerged in 2007-8 has exposed the
theoretical and political inadequacy of institutionalist approaches, and
pointed to the relevance of Marxist and other heterodox economics.  In this
session we wish to bring together papers which draw on these traditions to
examine the contradictions and crises of territorial economies, that is,
the social-spatial limits to capital.  Issues which might be addressed
include, but are not limited to –



* overaccumulation within sectors/territories leading to devalorisation;

* imbalances between production and the reproduction of labour power in
territory;

* disproportion between investment in production and the built environment;

* the contradictory relations between productive and financial capital in
space;

* disruption of accumulation by class struggles within both production and
reproduction (housing, transport, welfare services, household relations),
and disruption by (associated) struggles in gender and ‘racial’ relations;

* disruptions of territorial economies produced by strong growth,
congestion and inflation;

* how the state’s intervention into capital accumulation seeks to address
crisis tendencies but thereby also reproduces them in new forms, that is,
the contradictions, rather than the efficacy, of state interventions into
territorial economies;

* in particular, the logics for, but disruption of, accumulation by
neoliberalism.



We seek conversations on these issues with the radical
(non-institutionalist) economic geography of the last decades.  In
particular, we welcome contributions from ‘labour geographers’ on how
workers’ organisation and actions have been intertwined with territorial
and sectoral crises of accumulation; and contributions from the
regulationist tradition which focus not only on sources of capitalist
coherence but also on contradictions in accumulation and social
reproduction.



Given the lack of attention to contradiction and crisis in ‘geography’ in
recent decades, we particularly welcome exploratory and speculative papers.
We are interested in papers with emphases from theoretical to empirical.  The
historical scope of papers is not limited to the present global crisis.  We
particularly welcome papers concerned with economic and social crisis in
the Majority World.



Please send abstracts of up to 250 words to [email protected] by 30
January 2012.




-- 

Dr Jamie Gough

Senior Lecturer,

Department of Town and Regional Planning,

University of Sheffield,

Sheffield, S10 2TN,

England

0114 222 6909

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