Tim Di Muzio is lecturer in International Relations and public policy. Previous to
this role he was a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Centre for Excellence in Global
Governance Research at the University of Helsinki, Finland. He has taught at a number of
Universities including Oxford, York University, Trent University and the University of
Western Ontario. 

Tim’s research is guided by two main agendas. In the first agenda, his interests lie at
the intersection between the history of market civilization, global capitalism and
questions related to energy, the environment and global social reproduction. In the
second agenda, his interests lie at the intersection between war, racism and liberal
forms of rule in the making of world order. 

Articles

Capitalizing a future unsustainable: finance, energy and the fate of market civilization, Faculty of Arts - Papers (2012)

Liberal capitalist polities are being held up as the ultimate civilizational achievement precisely at a...

 

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The real resource curse and the imperialism of development, Faculty of Arts - Papers (2010)

The idea that the scope of anthropology in the face of the new development economics...

 

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Governing global slums: the biopolitics of Target 11, Faculty of Arts - Papers (2008)

Recent literature has focused on the ways in which civil society organizations are contributing to...

 
The 'Art' of Colonization: Capitalizing sovereign power and the Ongoing Nature of Primitive Accumulation, Faculty of Arts - Papers (2007)

In order to dispel Adam Smith’s liberal narrative of original accumulation, Karl Marx offered his...

 

Contributions to Books

Silencing the Sovereignty of the Poor in Haiti, Faculty of Arts - Papers (2008)

This chapter is animated by the idea that to write about the silencing of human...

 
Crises, Tensions, and Contradictions, Faculty of Arts - Papers (2003)

The themes of Part III involve the social consequences of financial crises, new forms of...

 
Governance and World Order (with Alejandra Roncallo), Faculty of Arts - Papers (2003)
 
Human In/Security on a Universal Scale (with Isabella Bakker and Stephen Gill), Faculty of Arts - Papers (2003)