Global Racial Capitalism Description “Racial Capitalism” provides a powerful frame and analytic method for the narration and analysis of the emergence of our present global economy. Our panelists discuss various national and international deployments of racial capitalism. Key moments 0:00 Introduction 0:50 Panel begins 9:39 – 11:34 Dennis Davis indexes Neville Alexander’s view of race. 20:46 – 23:02 Arun Kundnani explains that the term racial capitalism implies that capitalism can stably exist in a social formation with multiple modes of production, i.e. plantation slavery, and substitution economies. 53:40 – 55:28 Vesuki Nesiah argues that settler colonialism and capitalism together birthed a transnational legal regime that condemns ethnic cleansing while constructing and preserving the public and private spheres as separate and contrasting. This provides the legal foundation for territory to be translated into property and exploitation into private trade. 1:21:08 – 1:28:27 Neville Hoad, Dennis Davis, Arun Kundnani, Minkah Maklani, and Vesuki Nesiah discuss grounds for optimism in the context of ongoing global political, economic, social, and health crises. Arun Kundani,Dennis Davis,Minkah Makalani,Neville Hoad,Vasuki Nesiah Capitalism & Adjectives,Essential Work,Infrastructure,Racial Capitalism,Work Across the Global South FacebookTwitterLinkedin You may also like For Love and Money: The Future of the Arts and Humanities Now! Artistic Labor and the Humanities,Community Organizing,COVID-19,Essential Work,Growth & Degrowth,Infrastructure,Labor Organizing,Precarity,Radical Visions,Valuation Autofac, Science Fiction and the Future of Work AI and Technology,Artistic Labor and the Humanities,Automation & Technological Change,Capitalism & Adjectives,Precarity,Radical Visions,Valuation Keynote Opening Roundtable AI and Technology,Automation & Technological Change,Care Work,COVID-19,Essential Work,Informal Work,Precarity,Radical Visions,Valuation,Work Across the Global South What’s Wrong with the Gig-Economy? A Conversation Essential Work,Gig Economy,Informal Work,Labor Organizing,Precarity “Heroes” of the Global South: Labor Migration in Comparative Perspective Care Work,COVID-19,Essential Work,Migration,Precarity,Valuation,Work Across the Global South Informality and the Future of Work: A Conversation Care Work,Essential Work,Informal Work,Labor Organizing,Migration,Precarity,Racial Capitalism,Work Across the Global South