Marx’s Economy and Beyond

10 04 2013

‘Marx’s economy and beyond’ is a paper jointly written by Mark Harvey and Norman Geras.  Mark says

Our paper is entitled ‘Marx’s economy and beyond’. It is the result of nearly two years of discussion between us, and common work, on the strengths and weaknesses of Marx’s political economy – including the labour theory of value – and the general directions that need to be taken to move forward from it.

Click here to download the paper.





Mark Harvey’s bottled water research features in ESRC ‘Rio week’ video series

22 06 2012

Twenty years after the Earth Summit in Rio, the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (UNCSD) is taking place in Brazil on 20-22 June 2012.

The ESRC is marking Rio week by highlighting how social sciences are contributing to environmental research across a range of areas – such as societal change and policy uptake, consumer habits, employment, poverty, resource management, security, global development, low-income economies and risk mitigation.

In this video Professor Mark Harvey discusses his research on the development of drinking water infrastructures in the UK, India, Mexico and Taiwan.





CRESI research features in #essexsociology research bytes

17 09 2011
Professor Miriam Glucksmann: Research Byte (YouTube)
Professor Miriam Glucksmann: Research Byte (YouTube)

Essex Sociology’s new ‘Research Bytes‘ YouTube channel includes interviews with Professor Mark Harvey and Professor Miriam Glucksmann. Mark discusses his research on the tomato and on new approaches to sustainable biofuels and land-use whilst Miriam describes her recent research on work and especially the new paradigm of ‘consumption work‘.





Fresh media coverage for Mark Harvey’s research on false self-employment

6 01 2011

Mark Harvey and Felix Behling‘s work on false employment in the construction industry is gathering media attention:

These tax-evasive labour practises practices are estimated to cost the UK tax payer conservatively £1.7 billion per year.





New CRESI working papers/publications on transitions to biofuels

4 01 2011

A number of papers have recently been published by CRESI staff and colleagues on the issue of bio-fuels.

The first, by Sarah Pilgrim and Mark Harvey reports a series of interviews with staff at a number of NGOs (Greenpeace, Oxfam, WWF, RSPB, Friends of the Earth) and suggests that in many cases the development of NGO policy has been driven more by narrow political opportunities for influence than by broader and more coherent policy responses to global climate change or economic development, or indeed rigorous assessment of the scientific evidence. Read the rest of this entry »





Europe’s approach to biofuels: The Road to Nowhere

22 07 2010

Mark Harvey‘s research featured at a Westminster Energy, Environment & Transport Biofuel seminar at the Royal Society on 22nd July 2010.

“Mark echoed what other speakers also noted that in order to deliver a transition to sustainable transport energy strong, long-term strategic political direction is required, together with strong state support and steering from basic science to commercialisation. ‘Market signals will not drive radical, comprehensive or urgent technological change,’ he added.” Read  more coverage of the seminar from the Society of Chemical Industry (SCI).

Read the rest of this entry »





In the Orbit of the Tomato

21 06 2010

“After my father died, I discovered a film he had directed in 1938 for the historically famous GPO (General Post Office) film unit. It was called The Islanders, and in it, to my amazement, was a short section about Guernsey and the once-renowned Guernsey tomato.” Read the rest of this entry »





Media coverage: A pill for every ill

28 03 2010

CRESI’s Professor Joan Busfield’s research on the expansion in medicine use has been published in Social Science & Medicine in March 2010. The paper documents the substantial increase in expenditure on drugs by the NHS in England (a 60% increase in real terms over the decade to 2006) whilst the number of prescribed medicines dispensed increased from an average of 8 per person in 1989 to 16.4 in 2008 – a doubling over twenty years, with annual increases now running at around 4–5 percent.  Such increases are matched elsewhere. Read the rest of this entry »





Diane Elson and the Casablanca Dreamers

8 03 2010

CRESI’s Prof. Diane Elson‘s work featured recently in two panel sessions at the United Nations as part of the 54th Annual UN Commission on the Status of Women (March 1-12, 2010).

The first, “Vision for A Better World: From Economic Crisis to Equality” centred on the contributions of the Casablanca Dreamers, an international group of female activists and thinkers established in 2007 with the aim of empowering women in the developing world in order to help them overcome poverty.

Speaking to MediaGlobal, Diane who is a member of the Casablanca Dreamers criticised the response of many governments to the current economic crisis Read the rest of this entry »








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