Trajectories of Declining and Destructive Capitalism - (Research in Political Economy) by Rémy Herrera (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- Spanning three parts, Volume 40 of Research in Political Economy explores themes related to various "trajectories of declining and destructive capitalism" within the framework of contemporary Marxism.
- About the Author: Rémy Herrera is an economist and researcher at the National Center of Scientific Research (CNRS), France.
- 288 Pages
- Business + Money Management, Economics
- Series Name: Research in Political Economy
Description
About the Book
Volume 40 explores themes related to various "trajectories of declining and destructive capitalism" within the framework of contemporary Marxism. Social scientists from ten countries at various stages of their careers work to strengthen Marxism, applying methods to the interpretation and, above all, the transformation of the world.
Book Synopsis
Spanning three parts, Volume 40 of Research in Political Economy explores themes related to various "trajectories of declining and destructive capitalism" within the framework of contemporary Marxism. Social scientists from ten countries at various stages of their careers work to strengthen Marxism, applying its methods to the interpretation and, above all, the transformation of the world.
The chapters cover five continents and thirteen countries: Germany, Great Britain, France, Spain, Senegal, South Africa, Lebanon, Iran, India, Papua New Guinea, and Chile in the current period or very near past - plus two other countries, China and Cuba, in their more distant past preceding their respective socialist revolutions.
Providing a far-reaching and comprehensive overview of the damaging impact of capitalism across the globe, Trajectories of Declining and Destructive Capitalism confronts economic strategies at a pivotal moment in international politics.
About the Author
Rémy Herrera is an economist and researcher at the National Center of Scientific Research (CNRS), France. He supervises students in Ph.D. at the Centre d'Économie de la Sorbonne. He regularly works with the Centre Europe-Tiers Monde (Geneva), supporting it in its advisory role to the Human Rights Council of the United Nations.