2. Judith Dellheim/Frieder Otto Wolf: The challenge of the incompleteness of the Third Volume of Capital for theoretical and political work today
3. Riccardo Bellofiore (with the complicity of Frieder Otto Wolf):Taking up the challenge of living labour. A ‚backwards looking reconstruction‘ of the recent Italian debates on Marx’s theory of the capitalist mode of production
4. Fred Moseley: Capitalist Communism: Marx’s Theory of the Distribution of Surplus#Value in Volume III of Capital
5. Frieder Otto Wolf: Another, productive and challenging, ‚incompleteness‘ of the Third Volume of Capital
6. Joachim Bischoff, Stephan Krüger, Christoph Lieber: ‘Secular Stagnation’ and the Tendency of the Rate of Profit to Fall in Marx’s Critique of Political Economy
7. Kohei Saito: Profit, Elasticity and Nature
8. Georgios Daremas: The Social Constitution of Commodity Fetishism, Money Fetishism and Capital Fetishism
9. Jan Toporowski: Marx's critical notes on the classical note of interest
10. Judith Dellheim: ‘Joint-Stock Company’ and ‘Share Capital’ as Economic Categories of Critical Political Economy.
11. Patrick Bond: Capital Volume Three – gaps seen from South Africa: Marx’s crisis theory, Luxemburg’s capitalist/non-capitalist relations and Harvey’s seventeen contradictions of capitalism
12. Michael Brie: Foreshadowing of the future in the critical analysis of the present.
Judith Dellheim is a senior research fellow at the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation, Berlin, Germany. She has worked in the foreign trade of the GDR. Since 1990, she has been working on economies of solidarity, on political parties and movements, and on economic policies. She has been a member of the Federal Board of the PDS in 1995–2003, a free-lance scientific consultant from 2004–2010, and senior researcher at the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation since 2011. She is co-author of Rosa Luxemburg: A Permanent Challenge for Political Economy.
Frieder Otto Wolf is Honorary Professor of Philosophy at the Free University of Berlin, Germany. He has been a lecturer in philosophy at this institution since 1973, and became Honorary Professor in 2007. He has served as a fellow at the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation and sits on the advisory board of several journals. He has published books and articles on political philosophy, the politics of labor, the politics of sustainability, political epistemology, and metaphilosophy, including as co-author of Rosa Luxemburg: A Permanent Challenge for Political Economy.