Dear Friend/Colleague/Comrade,

You may be familiar with Capital & Class, but in case you have never
seen
it or have let your subscription lapse, I'm writing to let you know
about
both the latest issue, a 'Red-Green'  special, and also those planned
for
2001. (You can browse the contents pages of the last six issues on our
website, at www.cseweb.org.uk).

The 'Red-Green' issue is 250-pages on Environmental Politics: Analyses
and
Alternatives.  Eight articles make essential contributions to the
red-green
debate from four perspectives: Philosophy, Political Economy, Culture
and
Strategy.  Themes include Marx and the Animal/Human Distinction;
Capitalism
against Nature; Micro-Experiments in Alternatives, and Critical
Reflections
on 'Green' Product Strategies.  The issue also carries an extended
20-title
book reviews section.  You can buy it as a part of a subscription (3
issues
per year for £20 UK, £23 Overseas) or as a single issue for £7 plus
postage.  Contact the CSE office for details of payment etc.

Next year will mark 25 years of publishing the journal. To commemorate
the
anniversary we have a series of three special issues planned.  The first
of
the series, no. 73, due February 2001, will be on value theory.  Authors

and articles will include
ANDREW KLIMAN, The Exploitation Theory of Profit
GEORGE LIODAKIS, The People-Nature Relation and the Labour Theory of
Value
DAVID LAIBMAN, Rising 'material' vs. Falling 'value' Rates of Profit
STEVE FLEETWOOD, Marxist Theory of Value and Critical Realism
CHRIS ARTHUR, Value, Labour and Negativity

The second, No. 74, June 2001, will be an international issue and
feature
several leading commentators on the global economy, such as JOHN WEEKES
on
The Expansion of Capital and Uneven Development on a World Scale, and
GERARD DUMENIL 'On Brenner'. From Germany, LUTHJE & SCHERRER examine
Race,
Multiculturalism and Labour Organising in the USA, NGAI-LING SUM writes
on
An Integral Approach to the Asian Crisis; HAROON AKRAM-LODHI assesses
Peasants and 'real' Markets in Northern Pakistan and ANDY PIKE analyses
Corporate Retreat and the Abandonment of Host Economies in the Era of
'Globalisation', looking particularly at the case of Rolls Royce in
North-East England.

No. 75, Autumn 2001 will be a collection of essays by key writers whose
work has been printed in the journal since the beginning, and CSE is
planning a public event to coincide with it.
The book reviews section of special issues reflects the theme, and for
no.
75 we are planning an extended book reviews supplement.

If you want to know more about CSE and Capital & Class, please go to ur
website. You can read the contents of recent issues - themes include
Global
Capital: Riding the Storm?(67), Northern Ireland between Peace and War
(69)
and Work and Trade Unionism (71, plus subscribe online if you wish.  You

can also download abstracts from papers given at our Globalisation 2000
conference, find links to like-minded groups, and read news about
CSE-supported events.  And feel free to forward this email to anyone you

think may be interested in the journal.  And feel free to forward this
email to anyone you think may be interested in the journal.

Yours sincerely,


Deborah Knight
CSE Business Manager

25 Horsell Road, London N5 1XL
Tel/fax: 0207 607 9615
Website: www.cseweb.org.uk




--

Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Chico, CA 95929
530-898-5321
fax 530-898-5901

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