ABSTRACT

Through a study of the port district of Rio de Janeiro and its history, from its emergence as a major slave market to its modern-day incarnation as a hub of tourism, real estate and financial speculation, this book examines the different dimensions of the manner in which capitalism expands its global process of accumulation to incorporate spaces not yet integrated into chains of value production. As such, it sheds new light on the use of explicit non-economic violence on the part of capitalist expansion, in the form of colonial or imperial policies, plundering or legal forms of expropriation. As such, it will appeal to sociologists, historians, economists, legal scholars and political theorists with interests in capitalism and inequalities.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|19 pages

From primitive accumulation to entangled accumulation

Developments in the Marxist theory of capitalist expansion 1

chapter 2|9 pages

Port, capital and the capital city

chapter 4|18 pages

From the first attempts at industrialisation to financialisation

‘Little Africa’ vs Porto Maravilha

chapter 5|21 pages

Crisis anchored at the port

chapter |5 pages

Conclusions