Fundamental to the Economic Transformations series is the conviction that 'geography matters' in the diverse ways that economies work, for whom they work, and to what ends. The so-called imperatives of globalization, the promises of development, the challenges of environmental sustainability, the dull compulsion of competitive life, the urgency of campaigns for economic rights and social justice - in all of these realms geography really matters, just as it does for a host of other contemporary concerns, from financialized growth to climate change, from green production to gender rights, from union renewal to structural adjustment. The Economic Transformations series publishes monographs, tightly integrated edited collections, and short books on these and related issues, providing a space for interdisciplinary contributions and conversations from and among political economists, economic geographers, feminists, political ecologists, economic sociologists, critical development theorists, economic anthropologists, and their fellow travellers.