The Corporation I
Type: Virtual Paper
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Sponsor Group(s):
Cultural and Political Ecology Specialty Group
, Urban Geography Specialty Group
, Economic Geography Specialty Group
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Start / End Time: 4/7/2021 01:30 PM (Pacific Time (US & Canada)) - 4/7/2021 02:45 PM (Pacific Time (US & Canada))
Room: Virtual 30
Organizer(s):
Benjamin Goldstein
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Chairs: Benjamin Goldstein
Agenda
Role | Participant |
Introduction | Benjamin Goldstein |
Presenter | Joshua Newell University of Michigan |
Presenter | Markus Hesse University of Luxembourg |
Presenter | Carwil Bjork-James Vanderbilt University |
Presenter | Calli VanderWilde University of Michigan |
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Presentation(s), if applicable
Joshua Newell, University of Michigan; Why academics need to study the architecture of corporations |
Markus Hesse, University of Luxembourg; The politics of circulation. Re-visiting corporate geography in the light of Amazon.com |
Carwil Bjork-James, Vanderbilt University; Concession blocks, spiraling pits, and wily start-ups: Spatialities of Andean extractivism |
Calli VanderWilde, University of Michigan; Tracking Guatemalan Palm Oil from Producer to US Consumer |
Description
Paper Session: The Corporation
Session Organizers: Benjamin Goldstein (chair), Sanaz Chamanara, and Joshua Newell
Description:
The Dutch East Indies Company. Standard Oil Company. General Motors. Google. Since the ‘long 16th century’, the corporation has made an indelible mark on the world. Once founded by kingdoms and courts, the world’s biggest corporations now dwarf many countries in terms of economic clout, personnel, and cultural influence (Goldstein and Newell, 2019). Channeling immense flows of people, information, capital, materials and energy around the planet, corporations sculpt material, cultural, socio-economic and mental landscapes (Dicken, 2011). A cobalt miner in the Congo, a smelter in Mongolia, a factory worker in Taiwan, a cellphone user in Frankfurt, and an e-waste recycler in Ghana are linked across time and space by the financial and material exchanges of companies large and small. Through capital accumulation, corporations drive uneven development (Smith, 2008). Despite their salience to understanding the environmental and social dimensions of the contemporary economy, corporations are seldom ‘first-class’ subjects in the academy (Goldstein and Newell, 2019).
This objective of this session is to delve into the anatomy that is the corporation. We welcome submissions on a range of theoretical, conceptual, methodologically, and empirical inquiries on the corporation and its practices. We envision this session will connect disparate researchers from across Geography and other disciplines who are studying corporations. We encourage submissions on a range of possible topics, including but not limited to:
• Global production networks (GPNs) and the corporation
• Global value chains (GVCs) and the corporation
• Global commodity chains (GCCs) and the corporation
• Environmental and social change and the corporation
• Consumption and the corporation
• Corporate social responsibility and greenwash
• NGOs activism and the corporation
• Methodological approaches to track corporate supply chains
• Political Ecologies of the corporation
Preference will be given to papers that study specifics (i.e. individual) corporations rather than sectors writ large (e.g. forestry, etc).
Please email abstracts (max 250 words) to Benjamin Goldstein (benjgo@umich.edu) and Sanaz Chamanara (sanazch@umich.edu) by Thursday, Oct. 29, 2020 or any extended AAG deadline. We will then notify you if your paper has been selected for the session. Please email the session organizers if you have any questions. Those confirmed to the session will need to submit their abstract online and send us their PIN by Thursday, Oct. 29, 2020 or any extended AAG deadline. See https://annualmeeting.aag.org for more information.
References
Goldstein, B. and J.P. Newell. 2019. Why academics should study the supply chains of individual corporations. Journal of Industrial Ecology.
Dicken, P. 2011. Global Shift: Mapping the Changing Contours of the World Economy. The Guildford Press. Vol. 6th.
Smith, N. 2008. Uneven Development. 3rd ed. Athens: The University of Georgia Press.
The Corporation I
Description
Virtual Paper
Session starts at 4/7/2021 01:30 PM (Pacific Time (US & Canada))
Contact the Primary Organizer
Benjamin Goldstein - benjgo@umich.edu