Nicky Gregson, Mike Crang, Farid Uddin Ahamed, Nazneen Akhter et al.
Uzma Z. Rizvi
Abstract Acknowledgement I would like to thank my colleagues and friends Praveena Gullapalli and Benjamin Porter for the comments and insights that have helped shaped this piece in its initial stages. Additionally, this work has benefited from my conversations with Sandra Scham. I would also like to...
Nicky Gregson, Mike Crang, Farid Uddin Ahamed, Nasreen Akter et al.
abstract [Correction added after online publication March 16, 2011: The contact information for two authors was listed incorrectly. The email addresses for Farid Uddin Ahamed and Nasreen Akter have been corrected in this version.] This article both joins with recent arguments in economic geography t...
Catherine Alexander, Joshua O. Reno
* Introduction - Catherine Alexander and Joshua Reno * Section One: Global waste flows * 1. Shoddy rags and relief blankets: perceptions of textile recycling in north India - Lucy Norris * 2. Death, the Phoenix and Pandora: transforming things and values in Bangladesh - Mike Crang, Ni cky Gregson, F...
Mike Crang, Nicky Gregson, Farid Uddin Ahamed, Raihana Ferdous et al.
Ships are both the glue and grease of the global economy. The merchant vessel of the late twentieth-century and early twenty first-century, combined with the technology of the big box container, is the means by which most commodities move around the world—although its central role and those of marit...