AlamiI. (2018a) Capital accumulation and capital controls in South Africa: a class perspective.Review of African Political Economy,45(156), 223–249.
2.
AlamiI. (2018b) On the terrorism of money and national policy-making in emerging capitalist economies.Geoforum,96, 21–31.
3.
AlamiI. (2018c) Money power of Capital and Production of ‘New State Spaces’: A View from the Global South.New Political Economy,23(4), 512–529.
4.
AlamiI. (2019a) Post-Crisis Capital Controls in Developing and Emerging Countries: Regaining Policy Space? A Historical Materialist Engagement.Review of Radical Political Economics, online first.
5.
AlamiI. (2019b) Taming Foreign Exchange Derivatives Markets? Speculative Finance and Class Relations in Brazil,Development and Change, https://doi.org/10.1111/dech.12514
6.
BannerjiH. (2011) Building from Marx: reflections on “race”, gender, and class, in MojabS., and CarpenterS. (eds) (2011) Educating from Marx: Race, gender, and learning.Springer, 41–60.
7.
BassensD. (2012) Emerging markets in a shifting global financial architecture: The case of Islamic securitization in the Gulf region.Geography Compass,6(6), 340–350.
8.
BerndtC., and BoecklerM. (2009) Geographies of circulation and exchange: Constructions of markets.Progress in Human Geography,33(4), 535–551.
9.
BoitoA. (2010) ‘Social Classes and Politics in Brazil: From Cardoso to Lula‘, in Saad-FilhoA., and YalmanG.L. (eds) Economic Transitions to Neoliberalism in Middle-income Countries: Policy Dilemmas, Economic Crises, Forms of Resistance, pp. 190–201. London: Routledge
10.
BonefeldW. (1992) Social Constitution and the Form of the Capitalist State, In BonefeldW., GunnR., and PsychopedisK. (eds), Open Marxism: Dialectics and History, Vol. 1, Pluto Press, 93–132.
11.
BonefeldW. (2001) Kapital and its subtitle: a note on the meaning of critique.Capital and Class, 25(3), 53–64.
12.
BonefeldW. (2012) Negative Dialectics in Miserable Times: Notes on Adorno and Social Praxis.Journal of Classical Sociology12(1): 122–134.
13.
BonefeldW., GunnR., PsychopedisK. (1992) “Introduction”, In BonefeldW., GunnR., and PsychopedisK. (eds), Open Marxism: Dialectics and History, Vol. 1, Pluto Press, ix–xx.
14.
BonizziB. (2013) Financialization in developing and emerging countries: a survey.International Journal of Political Economy,42(4), 83–107.
15.
CarchediG. (2009) The fallacies of ‘new dialectics’ and value-form theory.Historical Materialism,17(1), 145–169.
16.
CastreeN. (2001) Commodity fetishism, geographical imaginations and imaginative geographies.Environment and Planning A,33(9), 1519–1525.
17.
CharnockG. (2010) The space of international political economy: On scale and its limits.Politics30(2): 79–90.
18.
CharnockG., and StarostaG. (eds.) (2016) The New International Division of Labour: Global Transformation and Uneven Development, Basingstoke: Palgrave.
19.
ChristophersB. (2015) Against (the idea of) financial markets.Geoforum, 66, 85–93.
20.
ClarkeS. (1978) Capital, fractions of capital and the state: ‘Neo-marxist analysis of the South African state.Capital & Class,2(2), 32–77.
21.
CopleyJ., and GiraudoM. E. (2018) Depoliticizing space: The politics of governing global finance.Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, online first.
22.
CoronilF. (1997) The Magical State: Nature, Money, and Modernity in Venezuela.Champagne, IL: University of Chicago Press.
23.
DinersteinA. (2017) ‘Decolonial Marxism‘, paper presented at the Colloquium for the 25th anniversary of Open Marxism, University of Puebla, Mexico, 16–10 October 2017
24.
Endnotes (2010) Endnotes 2: Misery and the Value form, April 2010, accessible at: http://endnotes.org.uk/issues/2 (last accessed 18.03.2016)
GhoshJ. (2005) The economic and social effects of financial liberalization: a primer for developing countries. DESA Working Paper No. 4, available at https://www.un.org/esa/desa/papers/2005/wp4_2005.pdf (last accessed 6 August 2019)
27.
GoughJ. (2004) Changing scale as changing class relations: Variety and contradictions in the politics of scale.Political Geography23(2): 185–211.
28.
GriffinP. (2013) Gendering Global Finance.Men and Masculinities,16(1), 9–34.
29.
GunnR. (1992) Against Historical Materialism: Marxism as a First-order Discourse, In BonefeldW., GunnR., and PsychopedisK. (eds.), Open Marxism, vol. 2: Theory and Practice, London: Pluto Press, 1–45.
30.
HarveyD. (1982/2006) Limits to Capital, 6th Edition, London: Verso Books.
31.
HarveyD. (1989) The Condition of Postmodernity.Oxford: Blackwell.
32.
HarveyD. (1990) Between space and time: reflections on the geographical imagination,Annals of the Association of American Geographers,80: 418–434.
33.
HeinrichM. (2004) An Introduction to the three Volumes of Marx's Capital, New York: Monthly Review Press
34.
HudsonM. (2004) Conceptualizing economies and their geographies: Spaces, flows and circuits,Progress in Human Geography, 28 (4): 447–471.
35.
KarwowskiE., and StockhammerE. (2017) Financialisation in emerging economies: a systematic overview and comparison with Anglo-Saxon economies.Economic and Political Studies,5(1), 60–86.
36.
KincaidJ. (2005) A critique of value-form Marxism,Historical Materialism, 13(2): 85–120.
37.
LeeR. (2011) Spaces of hegemony? Circuits of value, finance capital and places of financial knowledge. In AgnewJ., and LivingstoneD. (eds), Handbook of Geographical Knowledge, London: Sage, 185–202.
38.
Levy-OrlikN. (2013) Financialization and economic growth in developing countries: The case of the Mexican economy.International Journal of Political Economy,42(4), 108–127.
MarxK. (1867/1991) Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Vol. I, trans. Ben Fowkes, London: Penguin Classics
45.
MarxK. (1894/1991) Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Vol. III, trans. David Fernbach, London: Penguin Classics
46.
McNallyD. (2015) The dialectics of unity and difference in the constitution of wage-labour: On internal relations and working-class formation.Capital & Class,39(1), 131–146.
47.
NearyM., and TaylorG. (2016) Money and the Human Condition.London: Palgrave Macmillan
48.
OllmanB. (2003) Dance of the Dialectic: Steps in Marx's Method, Champagne, IL: University of Illinois Press
49.
PittsH. (forthcoming), Value form theory, Open Marxism and the New Reading of Marx, in Ana Cecilia Dinerstein, Alfonso García Vela, GonzálezEdith, & HollowayJohn (eds.) Open Marxism IV: Against a Closing World.London: Pluto Press.
50.
PritchardA., and MorganN. J. (2000) Privileging the male gaze.Annals of Tourism Research,27(4), 884–905.
51.
SidawayJ. D., and PrykeM. (2000) The strange geographies of ‘emerging markets’.Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 25(2), 187–201.
52.
SoederbergS. (2014) Debtfare States and the Poverty Industry: Money, Discipline and the Surplus population.London: Routledge.
53.
Sohn-RethelA. (1978) Intellectual and Manual Labour: a critique of Epistemology, Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey: Humanities Press.