economic choices and political strategies. Here, the ‘economic’ is centered on
capitalist commodity production (the realization and accumulation of profits, and
their investment in new production) rather than simply on market exchange.
Geography matters for two reasons. First, as for Lösch, space trumps economic
theory. The barriers that space poses to the rapid realization of profits on capital
invested in commodity production (in the form of both the built environment
and the geography of communication) require modifications to Marx’ theories
of value, class and crisis (Harvey 1982; Massey 1984; Scott 1980; Sheppard and
Barnes 1990; Webber and Rigby 1996). Second, nature constrains the impera-
tive to accumulate and grow that is at the center of capitalist commodity produc-
tion (Smith 1984). Both nature and the spatial organization of production are
dialectically related to capitalism: they are shaped by, but also shape, its evolution.
In this view, social movements have limited influence and unequal livelihood
chances are best redressed by replacing capitalism, although little normative or
empirical analysis of livelihood possibilities under more collective modes of
production has been undertaken.
During the 1990s political economy came to be dominated by regulation
theory. Seeking to understand capitalism’s resilience, geographers sought to
understand the transition from Fordism to post-Fordism and neoliberalism. Of
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