David Harvey
@davidharvey.org
18K followers 1.3K following 160 posts
Distinguished Professor, CUNY Graduate Center; Director of Research, Center for Place, Culture and Politics. New book: The Story of Capital (24 February 2026). Posts from David Harvey personally are signed -DH
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Reposted by David Harvey
traficantes-ed.bsky.social
David Harvey (@davidharvey.org) recuerda toda una vida de encuentros, intelectuales y reales, con el enigmático Piero Sraffa

Tras las huellas de Sraffa ➡️ newleftreview.es/issues/152/a...
Reposted by David Harvey
haymarketbooks.org
Chicago!

Haymarket Presents Ruth Wilson Gilmore in conversation with Barbara Ransby

Thursday, September 11th at 6:30 pm
Live from @haymarkethouse.bsky.social with @pilsencommbooks.bsky.social

RSVP to attend (in-person and virtual)
www.tickettailor.com/events/hayma...
Haymarket Presents
pilsen community books
Ruth Wilson Gilmore in conversation with Barbara Ransby
September 11th at 6:30 pm CT
Haymarket House 800 W. Buena
Reposted by David Harvey
feralcommie.bsky.social
A little starter pack of mostly small Marxist accounts for #MarxistMonday
davidharvey.org
I had the pleasure of speaking at the @newleftreview.bsky.social 152 launch in the @versobooks.bsky.social space in Manhattan along with @alybatt.bsky.social, Tim Barker and Alexander Zevin on Tuesday.
davidharvey.org
The American empire that has sheltered capital for so long is starting to crack. This is a moment of opportunity as well as of peril. A little bit of optimism of the intellect is called for, if only to jump-start the optimism of the will.

newleftreview.org/issues/ii152...
David Harvey, On Sraffa’s Trail, NLR 152, March–April 2025
David Harvey recalls a lifetime of encounters, actual and intellectual, with the enigmatic Piero Sraffa. Interlocutor of Wittgenstein, Keynes and Robinson; devastating critic of neoclassical economics...
newleftreview.org
davidharvey.org
and to people, events and political currents that open doors to new ways of thinking, hopefully more adequate to confront the central contradictions of our times. It is, however, one thing to open doors but quite another to pass through en masse, to explore what might exist on the other side.
davidharvey.org
So, here am I, in my ninetieth year, looking back on my career as a geographer interested in explaining, with a little help from Marx, how urbanization and uneven development work, finding myself obliged to some extraordinary scholars, such as Sraffa and Robinson;
Reposted by David Harvey
davidharvey.org
I've made 7 free online courses to help you read Karl Marx:

Reading Marx's Capital v1 (2019 & 2007 eds)
Reading Marx's Capital v2
Reading Marx's Grundrisse (2023 & 2020 eds)
Marx, Capital, & the Madness of Economic Reason
The ABC of Contemporary Capital

davidharvey.org/reading-capi...
Reading Capital
Courses: Reading Marx’s Capital Volume 1 with David Harvey (2019 Edition) Reading Marx’s Capital Volume I with David Harvey (2007 Edition) Reading Marx’s Capital Volume 2 with David Har…
davidharvey.org
davidharvey.org
Happy Birthday Karl Marx!
Reposted by David Harvey
nisrinelamin.bsky.social
We are proud to introduce our next Workshop4Sudan w/ Ruth Wilson Gilmore on May 5 at 12 pm (EDT). This wkshp will among other things allow 4 reflections on what internationalism frm below might look like, given abolition requires it + how we apply it to diff. contexts.
chuffed.org/project/work...
Image of a beautiful Black woman with black glasses and long grey locs head titled towards the camera and smiling, wearing cowry shell earrings. In yellow against black background the poster reads Workshops4Sudan The Soviets and Abolition, Monday, May 5th, 12-2 pm EDT. Virtual (via Zoom) Ruth Wilson Gilmore. Ruth Wilson Gilmore is a Writer, Abolitionist and Scholar from New Haven, Connecticut. Workshops4Sudan.
davidharvey.org
In other words the neoclassical production function rests on a tautology. But, said Robinson, “before the economist gets round to posing questions about this, he has become a professor, and so sloppy habits of thought are handed on from one generation to the next.” [3/4]
davidharvey.org
When capital is in money form there is no problem, but capital also consists of a heterogeneous stock of use values (e.g., machinery, plant and equipment) whose value cannot be established without invoking their impact on the value of Q. [2/4]
davidharvey.org
Joan Robinson pointed out that the economist’s production function (where Q the output is a function of labor and capital), lacks a satisfactory understanding of the units in which capital can be measured. [1/4]
Reposted by David Harvey
gabzaffari.bsky.social
This piece was a truly pleasurable read.

Its publication coincides fortuitously with a paper a friend and I recently published in ROPE, in which we seek to encourage economists to read more on Critical Geography.

Here is the link to the article:
www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1...
davidharvey.org
My response to this is that Steedman is correct if Marx’s theory of value is identical with that of Ricardo, which is Steedman’s position, but Marx does something very different when he insists that “socially necessary labor time” presumes sufficient effective demand. [2/3]
davidharvey.org
The odd thing is that quite a few Marxist economists, led by Steedman's book on Marx after Sraffa, were the only ones to take Sraffa seriously as totally undermining their key concepts (e.g. the role of Marx’s labor theory of value). [1/3]
Reposted by David Harvey
felicitycallard.bsky.social
I remember Harvey mentioning the name Sraffa several times as he taught us grad students Capital Vol 1 (and then parts of 2, 3) at Hopkins in the 1990s and I felt as though that name was preoccupying him, piercing him — but I had no idea of the history of that preoccupation that is laid out here