Research ArticleSpecial Issue
Imperial Capital and Anti-Black Extraction in South Africa
Maria Dyveke Styve
African Economic History, May 2024, 52 (1) 63-91; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.52.1.63
Maria Dyveke Styve
University of Glasgow
In this issue
African Economic History
Vol. 52, Issue 1
24 May 2024
Imperial Capital and Anti-Black Extraction in South Africa
Maria Dyveke Styve
African Economic History May 2024, 52 (1) 63-91; DOI: 10.3368/aeh.52.1.63
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- Article
- Abstract
- Introduction
- City of London from the 1870s–WWI: The Move Towards Finance
- Why Was the South African Mining Industry Important to the City of London?
- Why Was the City of London Important for the South African Gold Mining Industry?
- The Diamonds of Kimberley
- Gold on the Rand
- Capital and State Interdependence
- The Migrant Labor System, Compounds, Pass Laws and the Racialization of Capital Accumulation
- Imperial Racism and Civilizational Discourses
- Finance and Racial Capital Accumulation
- The Marikana Massacre and the Ghosts of the Past
- Acknowledgments
- Footnotes
- Info & Metrics
- References
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