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Racial capitalism, uneven development, and the abstractive powers of race and money

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  • Ilias Alami

    (Department of Human Geography, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden)

Abstract

How does the circulation of capital in the form of money and finance mobilize different constructions of “Blackness†across historical-geographical contexts, and how does this produce uneven development? This contribution offers theoretical and methodological provocations to think about this question, drawing on two cases of raced finance: race-based bank lending in the United States, and international investment to sub-Saharan countries. I argue that the impersonal character of social domination under capitalism, expressed in and by the movement of abstract categories (such as the commodity, value, money, the state) requires that we carefully mobilize the notion of abstraction in theorizing the co-production of racialized difference and uneven development. I develop this conceptual argument by way of a sympathetic yet critical engagement with recent scholarship on racial capitalism, and by bringing the critique of political economy into conversation with the Black radical tradition. The key question is not the extent to which cases of raced finance exhibit a paradigmatic “anti-Blackness.†Rather, it is about how the abstractive powers of race and the social forms of capital refract each other in violent configurations, and contribute to giving the capitalist production of space a raced imprint. The co-production of racialized and spatial difference thus enhances processes of capitalist discipline and extraction mediated by money, while the totalizing operations of money reproduce racialized power relations and uneven development. I then turn to the work of Bhandar and Toscano to reflect methodologically on how to mobilize various levels and modalities of abstraction in concrete research.

Suggested Citation

  • Ilias Alami, 2024. "Racial capitalism, uneven development, and the abstractive powers of race and money," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 56(4), pages 1304-1310, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:envira:v:56:y:2024:i:4:p:1304-1310
    DOI: 10.1177/0308518X231202914
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Lisa Tilley & Robbie Shilliam, 2018. "Raced Markets: An Introduction," New Political Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 23(5), pages 534-543, September.
    2. Ilias Alami & Vincent Guermond, 2023. "The color of money at the financial frontier," Review of International Political Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 30(3), pages 1073-1097, May.
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