In this brief note, I summarize some of Phil O’Keefe's contributions to the discipline of geography. I focus on there specific interventions and show his lasting impact.
BlautJMHaringKO’KeefeP, et al. (
1977)
Theses on the peasantry. Antipode9(
3):
125–
127.
2.
BrassT (
1997)
The agrarian myth, the new populism and the ‘new’ right. Journal of Peasant Studies24(
4):
201–
245.
3.
BrassT (
1999) Towards a Comparative Political Economy of Unfree Labour: Case Studies and Debates.
London:
Frank Cass.
4.
BrassT (
2000) Peasants, Populism and Postmodernism: The Return of the Agrarian Myth.
New York:
Frank Cass.
5.
BrassT (
2013) Labor Regime Change in the Twenty-First Century: Unfreedom, Capitalism and Primitive Accumulation.
New York:
Haymarket.
6.
HarveyD (
2006) The Limits to Capital, Third EditionLondon:
Verso.
7.
MarxK (
1967) Capital. Volume 1.
New York:
International Publishers.
8.
McCuskerBO’KeefePO’KeefePJ, et al. (
2013)
Peasants, pastoralists and proletarians: joining the debates on trajectories of agrarian change, livelihoods and land use. Human Geography6(
3):
3–
11.
9.
O’KeefePWisnerB (
1977) Land use and Development.
London:
International African Institute.
10.
O’KeefePWisnerBBairdA (
1977)
Kenyan Underdevelopment: A case study of proletarianization. In: O’KeefePWisnerB (eds) Land use and Development.
London:
International African Institute,
1–
33.
11.
OllmanB (
2003) Dance of the Dialectic: Steps in Marx’s Method.
Urbana, Il, USA:
University of Illinois Press.
12.
SmithNO’KeefeP (
1980)
Geography, Marx and the concept of nature. Antipode12(
2):
30–
39.