Brett Christophers – The Great Leveler: Capitalism and Competition in the Court of Law

Brett Christophers, The Great Leveler: Capitalism and Competition in the Court of Law – now published from Harvard University Press.

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For all the turmoil that roiled financial markets during the Great Recession and its aftermath, Wall Street forecasts once again turned bullish and corporate profitability soared to unprecedented heights. How does capitalism consistently generate profits despite its vulnerability to destabilizing events that can plunge the global economy into chaos? The Great Leveler elucidates the crucial but underappreciated role of the law in regulating capitalism’s rhythms of accumulation and growth.

Brett Christophers argues that capitalism requires a delicate balance between competition and monopoly. When monopolistic forces become dominant, antitrust law steps in to discourage the growth of giant corporations and restore competitiveness. When competitive forces become dominant, intellectual property law steps in to protect corporate assets and encourage investment. These two sets of laws—antitrust and intellectual property—have a pincer effect on corporate profitability, ensuring that markets become neither monopolistic, which would lead to rent-seeking and stagnation, nor overly competitive, which would drive down profits.

Christophers pursues these ideas through a close study of the historical development of American and British capitalist economies from the late nineteenth century to the present, tracing the relationship between monopoly and competition in each country and the evolution of legal mechanisms for keeping these forces in check. More than an illuminating study of the economic role of law, The Great Leveler is a bold and fresh dissection of the anatomy of modern capitalism.

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Half-day Workshop on Reading Capital, 11 February 2016, London

Half-day Workshop on Reading CapitalHalf-day Workshop on Reading Capital

Thursday 11 February 2016

Time: 2.00pm – 6.00pm
Venue: Swedenborg Society, 20 Bloomsbury Way, London
Price: free

2015 was the 50th anniversary of the original publication of Reading Capital by Louis Althusser, Etienne Balibar et al, a text that was to become a landmark in the history of both French thought and international Marxism. In this half-day workshop, we celebrate this anniversary by returning to two central philosophical themes of the book: Causality: Structure and Immanence and Time: Structure and History.

Speakers:
Etienne Balibar
Katja Diefenbach
Peter Hallward
Peter Osborne
Stefano Pippa

Join the Centre of Research in Modern European Philosophy for a workshop on Reading Capital.

For further information about this event: Contact: Eric-John Russell

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Books received – Shakespeare and Heidegger

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Some recently acquired books – various Shakespeare plays, a second-hand copy of John Julius Norwich’s Shakespeare’s Kings, and Guillaume Payen’s new biography Martin Heidegger: Catholicisme, révolution, nazisme, which I picked up in Paris.

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Books interview: David Harvey in Times Higher Education

Books interview: David Harvey in Times Higher Education – Eliot, Shakespeare, Dickens and, of course, Marx. Thanks to dmf for the link.

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10 Critical Theory books that came out in January

10 Critical Theory books that came out in January – Wahnich, Allen, Mitchell, Dean & Villadsen, Danchev, Malm, Gasche, etc.

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Shakespeare’s Globe to take Hamlet to ‘Jungle’ refugee camp

Shakespeare’s Hamlet recently performed at the Calais refugee camp. See also the extraordinary photo essay by Léopold Lambert at The Funambulist

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Calais performance will be latest in series company has staged at refugee settlements during its Globe to Globe world tour / The Globe Theatre’s touring production of Hamlet at the Zataari Refugee camp on the Jordanian-Syrian border.
Mark Brown Arts correspondent The Guardian
Friday 29 January 2016

Shakespeare’s Globe is taking its world touring production of Hamlet to the “Jungle” refugee camp in Calais.

5976Photograph: Sarah Lee for the Guardian

The theatre company said its Globe to Globe tour, which aims to play Hamlet to every country in the world by 23 April, would arrive in Calais for a one-off performance on Wednesday.

It will be staged in partnership with the Good Chance theatre and performance project created in the camp by the playwrights Joe Murphy and Joe Robertson.

Tom Bird, producer of Globe to Globe, said: “We had heard what the guys were doing at Good Chance and we decided…

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‘Rehearsing the State’ by Fiona McConnell, coming out soon

News of Fiona McConnell’s forthcoming book on Tibet’s government in exile.

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Society and Space ‘Politics of the list’ theme issue now online

New issue of Society and Space now online.

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A Selection of the Works of Ellen Meiksins Wood (1942-2016)

EMWVerso have made available a list of open-access work by Ellen Meiksins Wood, who died recently.

Ellen Meiksins Wood (1942-2016) was a Marxist historian and political thinker of enormous significance. We are proud to publish many of her books and, in order to encourage readers to engage with her work more broadly, we have collected the following list of articles and interviews currently in the public domain. With the kind permission of her publishers a number of the pieces are being made freely available for the first time.

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Manifeste pour une géographie environnementale: Géographie, écologie et politique

image001Manifeste pour une géographie environnementale: Géographie, écologie et politique – now out with Presses de Sciences Po, edited by Denis Chartier and Estienne Rodary. Simon Batterbury is one of the Anglophone contributors, and sent me an English translation of the book’s blurb (original here):

French geography has always refused to address environmental issues in a truly political way. As environmental crises multiply, and facing the specter of eco-skepticism that haunts French political thought, geography can and must rebuild.

This Manifesto for environmental geography marks a collective will to overcome individualized practice and to question the epistemological place and the politics of geography confronted with environmental politics. It discusses the history of the discipline in its dealings with the politics of nature, develops international comparisons, especially with political ecology, and introduces the main areas of investigation for geography with a conceptual apparatus  renewed by the Anthropocene.

It shows that geographers must leave behind the remnants of their disciplinary past, to accept that their discipline is fundamentally transformed by environmental issues.  This is the only way for the discipline to remain scientifically and politically relevant in today’s world.

Contributors : Frédéric Alexandre • Aziz Ballouche • Simon P.J. Batterbury • Farid Benhammou • David Blanchon • Frédérique Blot • Sébastien Caillault • Pierre-Olivier Garcia • Emmanuèle Gautier • Pierre Gautreau • Alain Génin • Jérémy Grangé • Christophe Grenier • Baptiste Hautdidier • Christian A. Kull • Patrick Matagne • Kent Mathewson • Pierre Pech • Philippe Pelletier • Olivier Soubeyran • Jean-Marc Zaninetti.

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