Nature, raw materials and political economy [electronic resource] / David A. Smith, Gay W. Seidman; Edited by Paul S. Ciccantell.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- 9781849503143
- 1849503141
- 10571922
Emerald ebook.
Ebook. PDF.
Epublication rendering of: 9780762311620, 2005.
IT Carlow ebook
Nature, Raw Materials, and Political Economy: An Introduction. Theoretical Foundations. Matter, Space, Time, and Technology: How Local Process Drives Global Systems. Environmental Sociology's Theoretical and Empirical Paradoxes. For a Sociology of 'Socionature': Ontology and the Commodity-Based Approach. Keeping Time: Temporal Hierarchies in Socio-Ecological Systems. Cycles of Accumulation, Crisis, Materials and Space: Can Different Theories of Change be Reconciled? Commodities, Extraction and Frontiers. Starting at the beginning: Extractive Economies as the Unexamined Origins of Global Commodity Chains. Sunk Costs, Resource Extractive Industries, and Development Outcomes. Japan's Economic Ascent and its Extraction of Wealth from its Raw Materials Peripheries. A Perceptual Extractive Frontier? The History of Offshore Petroleum in the Gulf of Mexico. Commodity Frontier as Contested Periphery: The Fur Trade in Iroquoia, New York and Canada, 1664-1754. Extraction, Gender and Neoliberalism in the Western Amazon. Material Process and Industrial Architecture: Innovation on the Cuban Sugar Frontier, 1818-1857. Connecting Political and Economic Change. World-Systems in the Biogeosphere: Three Thousand Years of Urbanization, Empire Foundation and Climate Change. Coffee, Revolution and Democracy in Central America. Peasants, Planters, and the Predatory State: Export Diversification in the Dominican Republic, 1970-2000. Selling the River: Gendered Experiences of Resource Extraction and Development in Lesotho.
Document
PDF: Adobe PDF.