Economic Anthropology
2014 - 2025
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Volume 10, issue 2, 2023
- Introduction to special issue: Value, values, and anthropology pp. 162-168

- Daniel Scott Souleles, Matthew Archer and Morten Sørensen Thaning
- The value of values: Sufficiency among single‐person businesses in the United States pp. 169-176

- Dawn R. Rivers
- Value as ethics: Climate change, crisis, and the struggle for the future pp. 177-185

- Sean Field
- Textures of value: Tactility, experience, and exclusion in the cashmere commodity chain pp. 186-196

- Kathryn E. Graber
- Southern politics, southern power prices: Race, utility regulation, and the value of energy pp. 197-212

- Kristin D. Phillips
- States of faḍl or stating faḍl: On the value of indebtedness for Iraqi exiles in Jordan pp. 213-222

- Abdulla Majeed
- Fractured Ownership and the Tragedy of the Anticommons in Hawai‘i pp. 223-232

- Danae G. Khorasani
- Valuing and devaluing: Struggles over social payments, dignity, and sneakers pp. 233-245

- Lindsay DuBois
- The “Department of Human Needs”: Renewable energy and the water–energy–land nexus in Zanzibar pp. 246-255

- Erin Dean
Volume 10, issue 1, 2023
- Missionary, citizen, and consumer: Evangelical American child sponsorship and humanitarian marketing in the 1950s and 1960s pp. 8-18

- Kari B. Henquinet
- Mirabel Airport: In the name of development, modernity, and Canadian unity pp. 19-31

- Éric Gagnon Poulin
- From money to culture: The practical indeterminacy of Bitcoin's values and temporalities pp. 32-43

- Yura Yokoyama
- Accessing cash(lessness): Cash dependency, debt, and digital finance in a marginalized Roma neighborhood pp. 44-54

- Camilla Ida Ravnbøl
- “Jobbos” and the “wageless life”: Exploring work and responsibility in the anti‐fracking movement in Lancashire, United Kingdom pp. 55-64

- Sarah G.P. O'Brien
- Who are neorurals? or, How capitalist time discipline dilutes political projects and makes it difficult to propose an alternative pp. 65-76

- Ieva Snikersproge
- Usurious strangers and “a better tomorrow”: Agricultural loans, education, and the “poverty trap” in rural Sierra Leone pp. 77-89

- Catherine E. Bolten and Richard “Drew” Marcantonio
- Patch‐work: The economic and moral complementarity of informal entrepreneurs' multiple projects in Congo‐Brazzaville pp. 90-99

- Rundong Ning
- Game of tax: Rethinking the relationship between redistribution and reciprocity through a Georgian tax lottery pp. 100-111

- Lotta Björklund Larsen
- Distributed fiscal relations and their imaginaries: Metaphors of redistribution and reciprocity in struggles about distributive justice in Austria pp. 112-121

- Andreas Streinzer
- Productivist fiscal deservingness: Entangled understandings of reciprocity and redistribution among German business owners pp. 122-131

- Andreas Streinzer and Sylvia Terpe
- Anthropological perspectives on race, nation, economics, and white supremacy: QUESTION: How can economic anthropology promote the construction of just and anti‐racist economic forms? pp. 132-134

- Yolanda T. Moses
- What a difference political economy makes: QUESTION: How can economic anthropology promote the construction of just and anti‐racist economic forms? pp. 135-137

- Micaela di Leonardo
- Anti‐Black racism, anthropology, and reparations: QUESTION: How can economic anthropology promote the construction of just and anti‐racist economic forms? pp. 138-139

- Kenneth M. Williamson
- Amplify, decolonize, collaborate, question: Action items for promoting just and antiracist economies: QUESTION: How can economic anthropology promote the construction of just and anti‐racist economic forms? pp. 140-142

- Karla Slocum
- Roots and sprouts: Legacies and futures of historic racial economic inequities and models for ways forward: QUESTION: How can economic anthropology promote the construction of just and anti‐racist economic forms? pp. 143-145

- Yolanda Covington‐Ward
- The substance of society pp. 146-148

- Chris Hann
- A mass conspiracy to feed people: Food Not Bombs and the world‐class waste of global cities. By David Boarder Giles. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2021. 320 pp pp. 149-150

- Kelly Alexander
- The laziness myth: Narratives of work and the good life in South Africa. By Christine Jeske. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2020. 246 pp pp. 151-152

- Xinyan Peng
- Making women pay: Microfinance in urban India. By Smitha Radhakrishnan. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2022. 272 pp pp. 153-154

- Sohini Kar
- The organization of ancient economies: A global perspective. By Kenneth Hirth. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020. 462 pp pp. 155-156

- Glenn R. Storey
- Taxis vs. Uber: Courts, markets, and technology in Buenos Aires. By Juan Manuel del Nido. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2021. 256 pp pp. 157-158

- Jean‐Philippe Warren
Volume 9, issue 2, 2022
- Landscapes of value pp. 193-206

- Andrea Rissing and Bradley M. Jones
- Climate opportunism and values of change on the Arctic agricultural frontier pp. 207-222

- Hannah Bradley and Serena Stein
- The future sits in places: Electricity, value, and infrastructural triage in Tanzania pp. 223-239

- Kristin D. Phillips
- From foraging to farming: Domesticating landscapes in the Midsouth three thousand years ago pp. 240-256

- Kandace D. Hollenbach and Stephen B. Carmody
- Amara e bella, bitter and beautiful: A praxis of care in valuing Sicilian olive oil and landscapes pp. 257-269

- Amanda Hilton
- The value of the homeland: Land in Duhok, Kurdistan‐Iraq, as territory, resource, and landscape pp. 270-283

- Katharina Lange
- The taboo of retreat: The politics of sea level rise, managed retreat, and coastal property values in California pp. 284-296

- Ryan B. Anderson
- Landscapes of rizq: Mediating worldly and otherworldly in Lahore's speculative real estate market pp. 297-308

- Tariq Rahman
- “We ain't never stolen a plant”: Livelihoods, property, and illegal ginseng harvesting in the Appalachian forest commons pp. 309-321

- Katherine Farley
- Valuing the ubiquitous: Resource availability and landscape value among the Classic period Maya of western Belize pp. 322-335

- Rachel A. Horowitz
- Plantation politics and discourse: Forests and property in upland Ireland pp. 336-348

- Jodie Asselin
- Merchants of the north: Infrastructure and indebtedness along Brazil's Amazon estuary pp. 349-360

- Matthew Abel
Volume 9, issue 1, 2022
- Banknotes, bookkeeping barter, and cloth money: Conversions of “special‐purpose money” in the cloth and dammar trade of Sulawesi, Indonesia, 1860–1905 pp. 8-21

- Albert Schrauwers
- Zimbabwe's national museums and monuments: Constructing culture and making money pp. 22-34

- Lorna L. Zukas
- Bitcoin and its spheres of consumption: Transactional orders of consuming money in the Czech and Slovak Bitcoin community pp. 35-46

- Martin Tremčinský
- Risk and responsibility: Private equity financiers and the US shale revolution pp. 47-59

- Sean Field
- Banking the Bazl: Building a future in a sanctioned economy pp. 60-71

- Ehsan Lor Afshar
- Anything but micro—no small change: Informality practices at a nonprofit microlender in Washington, DC pp. 72-83

- Antoaneta Tileva
- Incorporating craft: An experiment in community ownership in postliberalization India pp. 84-98

- Jane E. Lynch
- “Islands of excellence”: On the emergence of corporate socials in India pp. 99-111

- Nicole Rigillo
- Durable conversions: Property, aspiration, and inequality in urban northern Kenya pp. 112-124

- Hannah Elliott
- The economics of state violence: Explaining mass deportation pp. 125-136

- Beth F. Baker
- COVID‐19's ambiguous parcel: Agency, dignity, and claims to a rightful share during food parcel distribution in lockdown South Africa pp. 137-148

- Magnus Godvik Ekeland
- Turning the world on its head: The virus that disrupted “business as usual” pp. 149-154

- Fadwa El Guindi
- Not just disease: Ideology of risk and Indigenous population decline in North America pp. 155-157

- Gerardo Gutiérrez and Catherine M. Cameron
- What does pandemic response and recovery look like through the lens of anthropogenic violence and inequality? pp. 158-162

- Sabrina C. Agarwal
- The costs and constraints of pandemic response in Mali* pp. 163-166

- Tiéman Diarra
- The social construction of disaster: Economic anthropological perspectives on the COVID‐19 pandemic pp. 167-171

- Anthony Oliver‐Smith
- More than the market: Reinventing postpandemic economic relations pp. 172-175

- Agustín Fuentes
- Palestine Is Throwing a Party and the Whole World Is Invited: Capital and State Building in the West Bank. Kareem Rabie. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2021. 272 pp pp. 176-177

- Nazli Azergun
- The Current Economy: Electricity Markets and Techno‐Economics. Canay Özden‐Schilling. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2021. 224 pp pp. 178-179

- Leo Coleman
- Can Markets Solve Problems? An Empirical Inquiry into Neoliberalism in Action. Daniel Neyland, Véra Ehrenstein, and Sveta Milyaeva. London: Goldsmiths Press, 2019. 336 pp pp. 180-182

- Juan M. del Nido
- Digital Nomads: In Search of Freedom, Community, and Meaningful Work in the New Economy. Rachel A. Woldoff and Robert C. Litchfield. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021. 240 pp pp. 183-184

- Brandon Hunter‐Pazzara
- Forging Transnational Belonging through Informal Trade: Thriving Markets in Times of Crisis. Sandra King‐Savic. London: Routledge, 2021. 198 pp pp. 185-186

- Ognjen Kojanic
- Reimagining Money: Kenya in the Digital Finance Revolution. Sibel Kusimba. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2021. 240 pp pp. 187-188

- Daivi Rodima‐Taylor
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