Abstract
Recent work by critical development geographers has broken down borders between Marxist political economy and postcolonial theory. This has enabled deeper integration of critical approaches to race and culture with political economic analyses of class politics and imperialism, as well as more embracing theorizations of violence within capitalist development. It also potentially opens onto development geographies that more fully address the internal variegation of the Global South and South–South geopolitical economic relations, as part of the transnationalization of capital and social struggle.
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