From keith at breckenridge.org.za Wed Feb 24 13:42:23 2021 From: keith at breckenridge.org.za (Keith Breckenridge) Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2021 13:42:23 +0200 Subject: [Sugarman] E&S Special Issue on African Capitalism Message-ID: Dear friends, I'm very happy to say that the special issue on African capitalism that had its beginnings at the first meeting of this collaboration in May 2014, has finally seen the light of day in Economy & Society, 50: 1 . (This may be the longest gestating special issue in world history.) Thanks to everyone who worked on this, especially the many whose excellent papers didn't make it into the final issue. Economy and Society, Volume 50, Issue 1 (2021) : Recentring the margins: Theorizing African capitalism after 50 years Recentring the margins: Theorizing African capitalism after 50 years Keith Breckenridge & Deborah James What happened to the theory of African capitalism? Keith Breckenridge Life and debt: A view from the south by Deborah James The (anti) politics of central banking: Monetary policy, class conflict and the limits of sovereignty in South Africa Jason Hickel Does economics have an ?Africa problem?? by Grieve Chelwa The emergence of regulatory capitalism in Africa by Jonathan Klaaren Institutionalizing neoclassical economics in Africa: Instruments, ideology and implications by Howard Stein ------- Keith Breckenridge *W I S E R* - The Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of the Witwatersrand | Pbag 3, PO Wits, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2050 | Phone +27(0)11-7174272 | Web: wiser.wits.ac.za -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From drpeters at umich.edu Wed Feb 24 15:39:07 2021 From: drpeters at umich.edu (Derek Peterson) Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2021 08:39:07 -0500 Subject: [Sugarman] E&S Special Issue on African Capitalism In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear Keith and all: Many congratulations to Keith, Deborah and everyone involved in this project! It?s excellent to see it?finally?in print and out in the world. With good wishes, Derek --- Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA Professor of History & African Studies University of Michigan tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 www.derekrpeterson.com > On 24 Feb 2021, at 06:42, Keith Breckenridge wrote: > > Dear friends, > > I'm very happy to say that the special issue on African capitalism that had its beginnings at the first meeting of this collaboration in May 2014, has finally seen the light of day in Economy & Society, 50: 1 . (This may be the longest gestating special issue in world history.) Thanks to everyone who worked on this, especially the many whose excellent papers didn't make it into the final issue. > > Economy and Society, Volume 50, Issue 1 (2021) : > > Recentring the margins: Theorizing African capitalism after 50 years > Recentring the margins: Theorizing African capitalism after 50 years > Keith Breckenridge & Deborah James > > What happened to the theory of African capitalism? Keith Breckenridge > > Life and debt: A view from the south by Deborah James > > The (anti) politics of central banking: Monetary policy, class conflict and the limits of sovereignty in South Africa Jason Hickel > > Does economics have an ?Africa problem?? by Grieve Chelwa > > The emergence of regulatory capitalism in Africa by Jonathan Klaaren > > Institutionalizing neoclassical economics in Africa: Instruments, ideology and implications > by Howard Stein > > ------- > Keith Breckenridge W I S E R - The Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of the Witwatersrand | Pbag 3, PO Wits, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2050 | Phone +27(0)11-7174272 | Web: wiser.wits.ac.za > _______________________________________________ > Sugarman mailing list > Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za > http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman > This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Pamila.Gupta at wits.ac.za Wed Feb 24 16:04:16 2021 From: Pamila.Gupta at wits.ac.za (Pamila Gupta) Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2021 14:04:16 +0000 Subject: [Sugarman] E&S Special Issue on African Capitalism In-Reply-To: References: , Message-ID: <8956B9C7-D96F-4334-875B-F0EC3422EB98@wits.ac.za> I would also like to second Derek in saying congratulations to Keith, Deborah and the additional contributors. Wonderful to see it all come together! Sincerely, Pamila Sent from my iPhone On 24 Feb 2021, at 15:41, Derek Peterson wrote: ? Dear Keith and all: Many congratulations to Keith, Deborah and everyone involved in this project! It?s excellent to see it?finally?in print and out in the world. With good wishes, Derek --- Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA Professor of History & African Studies University of Michigan tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 www.derekrpeterson.com On 24 Feb 2021, at 06:42, Keith Breckenridge > wrote: Dear friends, I'm very happy to say that the special issue on African capitalism that had its beginnings at the first meeting of this collaboration in May 2014, has finally seen the light of day in Economy & Society, 50: 1. (This may be the longest gestating special issue in world history.) Thanks to everyone who worked on this, especially the many whose excellent papers didn't make it into the final issue. Economy and Society, Volume 50, Issue 1 (2021) : Recentring the margins: Theorizing African capitalism after 50 years Recentring the margins: Theorizing African capitalism after 50 years Keith Breckenridge & Deborah James What happened to the theory of African capitalism? Keith Breckenridge Life and debt: A view from the south by Deborah James The (anti) politics of central banking: Monetary policy, class conflict and the limits of sovereignty in South Africa Jason Hickel Does economics have an ?Africa problem?? by Grieve Chelwa The emergence of regulatory capitalism in Africa by Jonathan Klaaren Institutionalizing neoclassical economics in Africa: Instruments, ideology and implications by Howard Stein ------- Keith Breckenridge W I S E R - The Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of the Witwatersrand | Pbag 3, PO Wits, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2050 | Phone +27(0)11-7174272 | Web: wiser.wits.ac.za _______________________________________________ Sugarman mailing list Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. _______________________________________________ Sugarman mailing list Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Dilip.Menon at wits.ac.za Wed Feb 24 16:06:22 2021 From: Dilip.Menon at wits.ac.za (Dilip Menon) Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2021 14:06:22 +0000 Subject: [Sugarman] E&S Special Issue on African Capitalism In-Reply-To: <8956B9C7-D96F-4334-875B-F0EC3422EB98@wits.ac.za> References: , , <8956B9C7-D96F-4334-875B-F0EC3422EB98@wits.ac.za> Message-ID: An excellent collection of essays. Look forward to reading. Congratulations! Regards Dilip Dilip M Menon Ph.D. (Cantab.) Mellon Chair in Indian Studies Director Centre for Indian Studies in Africa University of Witwatersrand 36 Jorissen Street, Braamfontein Johannesburg 2050 South Africa tel: 0117174127 https://www.amazon.com/Capitalisms-Towards-Dr-Kaveh-Yazdani/dp/0199499713/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=capitalisms+menon&qid=1581584886&sr=8-1 From: Sugarman on behalf of Pamila Gupta Date: Wednesday, 24 February 2021 at 16:05 To: Derek Peterson Cc: sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za Subject: Re: [Sugarman] E&S Special Issue on African Capitalism I would also like to second Derek in saying congratulations to Keith, Deborah and the additional contributors. Wonderful to see it all come together! Sincerely, Pamila Sent from my iPhone On 24 Feb 2021, at 15:41, Derek Peterson wrote: ? Dear Keith and all: Many congratulations to Keith, Deborah and everyone involved in this project! It?s excellent to see it?finally?in print and out in the world. With good wishes, Derek --- Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA Professor of History & African Studies University of Michigan tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 www.derekrpeterson.com On 24 Feb 2021, at 06:42, Keith Breckenridge > wrote: Dear friends, I'm very happy to say that the special issue on African capitalism that had its beginnings at the first meeting of this collaboration in May 2014, has finally seen the light of day in Economy & Society, 50: 1. (This may be the longest gestating special issue in world history.) Thanks to everyone who worked on this, especially the many whose excellent papers didn't make it into the final issue. Economy and Society, Volume 50, Issue 1 (2021) : Recentring the margins: Theorizing African capitalism after 50 years Recentring the margins: Theorizing African capitalism after 50 years Keith Breckenridge & Deborah James What happened to the theory of African capitalism? Keith Breckenridge Life and debt: A view from the south by Deborah James The (anti) politics of central banking: Monetary policy, class conflict and the limits of sovereignty in South Africa Jason Hickel Does economics have an ?Africa problem?? by Grieve Chelwa The emergence of regulatory capitalism in Africa by Jonathan Klaaren Institutionalizing neoclassical economics in Africa: Instruments, ideology and implications by Howard Stein ------- Keith Breckenridge W I S E R - The Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of the Witwatersrand | Pbag 3, PO Wits, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2050 | Phone +27(0)11-7174272 | Web: wiser.wits.ac.za _______________________________________________ Sugarman mailing list Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. _______________________________________________ Sugarman mailing list Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: