This short paper is a note offering provisional results of my current research in philosophical economics and the philosophy of economics. It is offered in the spirit of promoting discussion of an interesting topic worthy of further investigation.
Download Free PDF View PDF
Download Free PDF View PDF
Meaning and the Commodity Form
Social scientists often treat the commodity form and commodity fetishism as concepts that reduce meaning to an economic base. The paper claims that this view is misguided and, furthermore, that these concepts enable
Download Free PDF View PDF
Download Free PDF View PDF
in T.M. Shaw et al. (eds). The Palgrave Handbook of Contemporary International Political Economy
The chapter that Charis Enns and I wrote for the Palgrave Handbook on Contemporary IPE.
Download Free PDF View PDF
After a long time India has experienced the commodity trading at a time when its people has forgot the trading process with a very low interest gaining a good pace after ten years of its introduction. It is necessary to thus introduce the new generation with the modern commodity trading mechanism. This paper in short aims at introducing three points: what commodity trading means; where it takes place i.e. Commodity exchanges, and, how is it regulated in the Indian economy.
Download Free PDF View PDF
Culture & Organization “Commodities & markets” issue Edited by Stevphen Shukaitis & Ming Lim 1. Eleftheria Lekakis The Fair Trade Revolution Will Be Marketised? Coffee, Consumption and Commodification 2. Stephen Duncombe It Stands on its Head: Commodity Fetishism, Consumer Activism, and the Strategic Use of Fantasy 3. George Tsogas The Commodity-Form in Cognitive Capitalism 4. Elmar Flatschart The Commodity and its Other 5. Helena Pedersen Education, animals, and the commodity form
Download Free PDF View PDF
SSRN Electronic Journal
Download Free PDF View PDF
McGill-Queen's University Press eBooks
Download Free PDF View PDF
Effectively marketing commodities, understanding market and price dynamics, and managing price risks have become more complex in food markets that are increasingly global, interdependent, computerized, and geopolitically-influenced. Simultaneously, these aspects of agricultural supply chains are critical to the economic sustainability of producers and agribusinesses. As such, there remains continued interest from academia and industry researchers to develop tools and analysis for better understanding the constantly evolving dynamics of commodity markets. There is also continued demand from producers, agribusiness managers, consumers, government agencies, and others who seek to implement these tools for private and public benefit.
Download Free PDF View PDF