![]() ![]() This framework further highlights the importance of money in contemporary credit/debt relationships and their contestation, which has so far received insufficient attention in relevant anthropological scholarship. This paper uses the Polanyian idea of "double movement" to show how the Croatian debt contestations responded to the distinctively peripheral form of financialization in Eastern Europe, characterized by hierarchical international relationships and an intensified expropriation of debtors. Much of this lending took high-risk and predatory forms that transferred significant risks to debtors, which in turn became the target of contestation by debt activists. ![]() Abstract: Croatia has experienced a marked boom in household debt in the 2000s. The final authenticated version is available online at: TBA. This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article to be published in Dialectical Anthropology. ![]()
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