Publication subTitle :Race, Space, and Capital in Southern California
Author: De Lara Juan
Publisher: University Of California Press
Publication year: 2018
E-ISBN: 9780520964181
P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780520297395
Subject: K7 Americas History
Keyword: 美洲史
Language: ENG
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Description
The subprime crash of 2008 revealed a fragile, unjust, and unsustainable economy built on retail consumption, low-wage jobs, and fictitious capital. Economic crisis, finance capital, and global commodity chains transformed Southern California just as Latinxs and immigrants were turning California into a majority-nonwhite state. In Inland Shift, Juan D. De Lara uses the growth of Southern California’s logistics economy, which controls the movement of goods, to examine how modern capitalism was shaped by and helped to transform the region’s geographies of race and class. While logistics provided a roadmap for capital and the state to transform Southern California, it also created pockets of resistance among labor, community, and environmental groups who argued that commodity distribution exposed them to economic and environmental precarity.
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