What is the Colonial Global Economy? Dr Paul Robert Gilbert

The Connected Sociologies Podcast - A podcast by connectedsociologies

Categories:

It is increasingly common for claims to be made about the incompatibility between capitalist ‘progress’ and the institution of slavery, and to frame colonisation as economically advantageous for the colonised. Yet this overlooks the considerable scholarship, primarily from the ‘Global South’, which shows that industrial capitalism in Europe (and the UK in particular) would have been unaffordable without slavery, and that transfers of wealth from the colonies to colonial powers continue to shape contemporary inequalities. In this sense, the global economy can be understood as a colonial global economy, shaped not only by the legacies of our colonial past, but by colonially-instituted arrangements and relationships which persist into the present. This session will examine the colonial global economy as one which operates through racialized forms of exploitation, extraction and perverse inclusion, from the heights of international economic law, down to labour regimes in global supply chains.   Readings Anghie, Antony. 2012. Imperialism, Sovereignty & the Making of International Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Bhambra, Gurminder K. 2020. Colonial global economy: towards a theoretical reorientation of political economy. Review of International Political Economy. Goswami, Manu. 2018. Crisis economics: Keynes and the End of Empire. Constellations 25: 18-34. Koddenbrock, Kai & Sylla, Ndongo Samba. 2019. Towards a political economy of monetary dependency; the case of the CFA franc in West Africa. MaxPo Discussion Paper, No. 19/2. Neptune, H. Reuben. 2019. Throwin’ scholarly shade: Eric Williams in the New Histories of Capitalism & Slavery. Journal of the Early Republic, 39(2): 299-326. Tilley, Lisa. 2020.“A Strange Industrial Order:” Indonesia’s racialized plantation ecologies and anticolonial estate worker rebellions.History of the Present 10 (1) Resources Accounting for British History – blog by Gurminder K Bhambra How Wall Street Colonized the Caribbean – blog by Peter James Hudson   Questions for discussion How are contemporary wealth transfers and inequalities shaped by colonial relationships in the present? What does it mean to understand the global economy as a colonial global economy? Why might dominant frameworks for understanding economic crises in the global economy neglect its colonial foundations?