Today we uploaded two new open access book reviews:

Rodd Myers (University of East Anglia) on Derek Hall, Philip Hirsch and Tania Murray Li’s Powers of Exclusion: Land Dilemmas in Southeast Asia;
Anne Rademacher (New York University) on Colin McFarlane’s Learning the City: Knowledge and Translocal Assemblage.
The authors have recently published some excellent essays in Antipode; be sure to check out Derek Hall’s ‘Rethinking Primitive Accumulation: Theoretical Tensions and Rural Southeast Asian Complexities‘, Tania Murray Li’s ‘To Make Live or Let Die? Rural Dispossession and the Protection of Surplus Populations‘ and Colin McFarlane’s ‘Rethinking Enclosure: Space, Subjectivity, and the Commons‘ (co-authored with Alex Jeffrey and Alex Vasudevan).
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All Antipode book reviews are now freely available from our online repository, Wiley Online Library. While this digital archive will remain in place, from January 2013 we’ll no longer publish book reviews in the journal; all book reviews will migrate to AntipodeFoundation.org. This will allow us to feature not only more reviews, but also more substantive reviews (in the style, say, of the London Review of Books), more quickly. The makeover will also transform the book reviews section into a more capacious ‘Book reviews, etc.’ section, that may now feature, in addition to book reviews, reviews of film and music, grey literature, and political pamphlets – in fact, any texts that have something to say to the radical geographic imagination. If you’ve an idea for a review, please get in touch with Vinay Gidwani.
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Another review, just added: Peter Brogan (York University) on Jane Wills et al.’s Global Cities at Work: New Migrant Divisions of Labour.
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