I first briefly review the rise, fall and resurgence of Marxist political economy in
the past century. I then look at the seminal work of a number of geographers, econ-
omists and sociologists strongly influenced by Marxist thought – David Harvey
(1973, 1985), Stuart Holland (1976), Manuel Castells (1977), Doreen Massey
and Richard Meegan (1978, 1982), Barry Bluestone and Bennett Harrison (1982),
Gordon Clark (1989), Michael Storper and Richard Walker (1989), among others
– and show what they brought from it to economic geography in the 1970s
through the early 1980s. These include an emphasis on working class/race/gender
analysis, an understanding of the corrosive and uneven impact of capitalist devel-
opment on cities and regions, the case for meso-economic analysis, acknowledge-
ment of the role of contestation and struggle, an appreciation for institutions,
especially the role of the state, and a commitment to research and advocacy in the
interests of the exploited. I then illustrate the elements of a political economy-
informed economic geography by reviewing 20 years of work on the military indus-
trial complex. In closing, I address the continued synergy between the two fields.
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