Beverley Mullings
Beverley Mullings is Professor of Black economic geographies in the department of Geography and Planning at the University of Toronto. Her research draws upon feminist political economy and anti-colonial frameworks to address questions of labor, social transformation, neoliberalism, and the politics of gender, race, and class in the Caribbean and its diaspora. She is interested in the ways that evolving racial capitalist regimes are recasting and transforming work, the production of care economies, and patterns of urban governance in the majority world. Mullings is currently engaged in three major research projects: the first examines the financialization of Caribbean remittance economies; the second explores emergent hustle and informal economies within racial capitalist regimes; and the third, the place of diaspora in the re-making of Caribbean Radical Traditions. Her publications have appeared in a number of journals including the Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Gender, Place & Culture, the Journal of Economic Geography, Antipode, Review of International Political Economy, Small Axe, Geoforum, and Environment and Planning A.