Growing numbers of scholars have called attention to the instrumentality of racial categories to the geographic organization of economic activities in capitalist systems. Seen as a constitutive part of capitalism itself, scholars argue that the key dynamics that drive economies within capitalist systems are articulated through and dependent upon hierarchical racial orders. As a justification for violent forms of dispossession, or way to naturalise or capitalize upon the unequal distribution of resources, rights, and privileges, capitalism's entanglements with racial distinctions continue to be crucial to the profitability and smooth functioning of all market economies. Black Geographies scholars argue that the racialized production of space is made possible by the routine demarcation of spaces associated with racialized bodies and communities as invisible and forgettable, or alternatively as hyper-visible and available for expropriation. This course aims to map the contours of a research agenda that interrogates the place of blackness in geographical of knowledge production about economies. In studying Black Economic Geographies, the aim is to introduce methodologies to mainstream Economic Geography that not only draw attention to the juridical and economic architectures that produce blackness as a metric in the production and circulation of capital globally, but also, the unique possibilities for futures based on co-operation, stewardship, and social justice that an understanding of racial subjugation as constitutive of the modern economy invites.