Abstract

AbstractIn this brief afterword, I reflect on the contributions to the Area special section on the “Geographies of Labour in a Changing Climate.” I argue that there is an urgent need to develop a research agenda under this theme and that, with its focus on multi‐scalar dynamics and the constrained agency of workers, labour geography already has a toolkit that is well attuned to the task. In conclusion, the case is made for developing an approach that might be characterised as a “political ecology of labour.”

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