The Violence of Development: Two political imaginaries
J.K. Gibson-Graham explores two responses to the violence of development – the politics of empire and the politics of place. Drawing on the well-known book Empire by Hardt and Negri, the experience of the SID project on Women and the Politics of Place, and a slum dwellers' initiative in India, she attempts to open up alternatives to the dominance of capital and affirm a new political space.
Upload file
Link to publisher's page
Suggested citation
Gibson-Graham, J. K. 2004. “The Violence of Development: Two Political Imaginaries.” Development 47 (1): 27–34. https://doi.org/10.1057/palgrave.development.1100013.
