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Marx’s Capital, Capitalism and Limits to the State: Theoretical Considerations

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Marx’s Capital, Capitalism and Limits to the State examines the capitalist state in the abstract, and as it exists in advanced capitalism and peripheral capitalism, illustrating the ideas with evidence from the North and the South.

 

The volume unpacks the capitalist state’s functions in relation to commodity relations, private property, and the crisis-ridden production of (surplus) value as a part of the capital circuit (M-C-M′). It also examines state’s political and geographical forms. It argues that no matter how autonomous it is, the state cannot meet the pressing needs of the masses significantly and sustainably. This is not because of so-called capitalist constraints, but because the state is inherently capitalist. Each chapter begins with Capital volume 1. And each chapter ends with theoretical/practical implications of the ideas which taken together counter existing state theory’s focus on state autonomy and reforms and point to the necessity for the masses to establish a new transitional democratic state. But the book goes ‘beyond’ Marx too, as it deploys the combined Marxism of 19th and 20th centuries.

Marx’s Capital, Capitalism and Limits to the State will interest scholars researching state-society/economy relations. It is suitable for university students as well as established scholars in sociology, political science, heterodox economics, human geography, and international development.

Author: Das Raju
Publisher: ROUTLEDGE
Pages: 348
ISBN: 9781032248813
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2022

1. Introduction, 2. A critical review of Marxist state theory post Marx, 3. The state and class relations, 4. The state’s internal relation with capitalism and capitalists, 5. The state, capitalist commodity relations, and labour power, 6. The state and capitalist property relations, 7. The state, and capitalist production, exploitation, accumulation, and crisis, 8. The state, and the agency of capitalists and state actors, 9. The state and the agency of the working class, 10. State Forms: Geographic and bureaucratic, 11. Capitalism, imperialism, and the state in the global periphery

Raju J Das is Professor at York University, Toronto. His teaching and research interests are in political economy, class theory, the capitalist state, and international development. His recent books include Marxist Class Theory for a Skeptical World. He is associated with a number of scholarly journals: Dialectical AnthropologyRace, Class and Corporate PowerCritical SociologyHuman Geography; and Science and Society: A Journal of Marxist Thought and Analysis.

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