Value, rent, and nature: the centrality of class
Value, rent, and nature: the centrality of class
Welcoming the renewed interest in value among geographers, we engage with the arguments that Kay and Kenney-Lazar (2017) put forward in their article, ‘Value in Capitalist Natures: An Emerging Framework’. We organize our contribution around three important aspects that can advance current debates and propose an agenda for future research. Firstly, we argue that current debates need to refocus from whether nature contributes to material wealth to whether and how nature relates to the value form under capitalism. Secondly, we highlight the need for a systematically joint analysis of value and rent to understand the role of nature in capitalism. This analysis leads to a focus on class and class struggle and requires interdisciplinary collaborations between nature–society geographers and other scholars working within the value theoretical framework to bridge current struggles over rent and value. Thirdly, contra Kay and Kenney-Lazar, we argue that beyond capitalism we do not need either alternative valuation systems or value but rather a new vocabulary to redefine social needs and social wealth.
46-51
Greco, Elisa
a434b64c-cde7-4932-8b37-d6cfb829e732
Apostolopoulou, Elia
e30e62ad-7e3c-4744-9929-261187c19b04
Greco, Elisa
a434b64c-cde7-4932-8b37-d6cfb829e732
Apostolopoulou, Elia
e30e62ad-7e3c-4744-9929-261187c19b04
Greco, Elisa and Apostolopoulou, Elia
(2019)
Value, rent, and nature: the centrality of class.
Dialogues in Human Geography, 10 (1), .
(doi:10.1177/2043820619876386).
Abstract
Welcoming the renewed interest in value among geographers, we engage with the arguments that Kay and Kenney-Lazar (2017) put forward in their article, ‘Value in Capitalist Natures: An Emerging Framework’. We organize our contribution around three important aspects that can advance current debates and propose an agenda for future research. Firstly, we argue that current debates need to refocus from whether nature contributes to material wealth to whether and how nature relates to the value form under capitalism. Secondly, we highlight the need for a systematically joint analysis of value and rent to understand the role of nature in capitalism. This analysis leads to a focus on class and class struggle and requires interdisciplinary collaborations between nature–society geographers and other scholars working within the value theoretical framework to bridge current struggles over rent and value. Thirdly, contra Kay and Kenney-Lazar, we argue that beyond capitalism we do not need either alternative valuation systems or value but rather a new vocabulary to redefine social needs and social wealth.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 22 September 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 490576
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490576
PURE UUID: 38bde21b-2862-42aa-9041-1b5220939dd5
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Date deposited: 30 May 2024 16:52
Last modified: 31 May 2024 02:09
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Author:
Elisa Greco
Author:
Elia Apostolopoulou
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