1,721,343 research outputs found

    The Wiener Modulus of a Radial Measure

    No full text
    Dal Maso, G.; Mosco, Umberto. (1985). The Wiener Modulus of a Radial Measure. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/3951

    Relaxed shape optimization: The case of nonnegative data for the Dirichlet problem

    No full text
    Chipot, M.; Dal Maso, G.. (1990). Relaxed shape optimization: The case of nonnegative data for the Dirichlet problem. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/5174

    Wiener's Criterion and γ\gamma - Convergence

    No full text
    Dal Maso, G.; Mosco, Umberto. (1985). Wiener's Criterion and γ\gamma - Convergence. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/3495

    Wiener Criteria and Energy Decay for Relaxed Dirichlet Problems

    No full text
    Dal Maso, G.; Mosco, Umberto. (1985). Wiener Criteria and Energy Decay for Relaxed Dirichlet Problems. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/4023

    Stopping Times and G-Convergence

    No full text
    Baxter, J.; Dal Maso, G.; Mosco, Umberto. (1986). Stopping Times and G-Convergence. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/4386

    The Financial Crisis and a Crisis of Expertise: A Chinese Genealogy of Neoliberalism

    No full text
    The paper investigates the distinctly Chinese intertwining of expertise and state & financial capital to enrich the current understanding of neoliberalism as a hegemonic governing rationale. Since the summer of 2015, China has been experiencing one of its most severe financial crises since the adoption of a 'socialist market economy' in 1978. However, globally circulating narratives have failed to look beyond a Western-centric corollary, rehashing a critique of the Chinese one-party system and its lack of a 'genuine' free market. By exploring the specific genealogy of Chinese capitalism, and the distinctive Chinese financial-market structure, the article will show how the scientific authority of experts formulated amongst neoliberal thinkers never permeated the Chinese idea of knowledge. In the Chinese variety of financial capitalism, expertise is seen to lie not so much in the wisdom of individual experts as in their socio-political support, which legitimises their economic interventions

    China as a laboratory to renegotiate globalization: Statecraft through the selective exclusion of foreign capital

    No full text
    Building on Ilias Alami's invitation to reconceptualize foreign investment screening mechanisms as state tools for renegotiating (post)globalization, this commentary mobilizes China's historical engagement with foreign capital, positioning it as a 'laboratory' for rethinking statecraft amid the transformations of global capitalism. By tracing the genealogy of selective regulatory practices - including the establishment of special economic zones - this analysis underscores how China's 'exceptional spaces' and 'exceptional legal forms' have actively reshaped globalization through the strategic exclusion of foreign capital from critical national sectors. Moving beyond reductionist framings of 'state capitalism' and 'globalization', the commentary foregrounds the layered and contingent processes of valorization and accumulation that characterize contemporary capitalist globalization

    Exploiting time in Green Visions for Thailand: How Green Finance Leverages Past Infrastructure for Future Returns

    Full text link
    The climate crisis calls for a reassessment of infrastructure's role in the energy transition. This urgency has catalysed an expanding green finance paradigm, which is reshaping the roles of states and private actors through the creation of green infrastructural projects. This article examines Thailand's northeast province, an emerging renewable energy hub, to explore how Cold War-era geopolitical and military infrastructures are being repurposed as green assets. These upgrades, both technological and financial, align with reframing their historical political roles. The study reveals how infrastructure transformation involves shifts in the actors and mechanisms of financing. Once converted into green assets, these infrastructures serve as eco-temporal fix, allowing the military junta to address political instability while promoting a green future. The article ultimately shows how speculative processes in transforming infrastructure enable financial capital accumulation and reinforce political legitimacy

    Past and present financialization in Central Eastern Europe: the case of Western subsidiary banks

    Full text link
    By examining the ‘post’ financial crisis scenario in Central Eastern Europe (CEE) the paper assesses the role of Western banks in the region and how their penetration and ‘resilience’ is influenced by their parent and subsidiary structure. While taking stock of the variegated post-socialist transformation in CEE, it employs a genealogical method to explore how the universal bank model and its current ‘bifurcation’ into parent and subsidiary bank provides a lens through which to investigate a new form of dependency within the uneven geography of Europe. In the light of Rudolf Hilferding’s theory of the universal bank and the theorization of financial capital, it illustrates how the present form of bank capitalization overlaps with previous forms of imperial expansion. If on one hand subsidiaries sit at the intersection between the core (home country) and the periphery (host country)— reproducing some of the old spatial hierarchy of capitalism; on the other they also enable new patterns of value extraction that go beyond these relations of dependency. Their autonomy in raising capital and in responding to local host jurisdiction in their “second home market” opens a new financial dimension of extractions that escape the oversight of national and regional regulatory regimes

    A capacity method for the study of Dirichlet problems for elliptic systems in varying domains

    Full text link
    The asymptotic behaviour of solutions of second order linear elliptic systems with Dirichlet boundary conditions on varying domains is studied by means of a suitable notion of capacity
    corecore