| 1 | Collaborative and competitive strategies in the variability and resiliency of large‐scale societies in Mesoamerica | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 61 |
| 2 | Water sharing, reciprocity, and need: A comparative study of interhousehold water transfers in sub‐Saharan Africa | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2019 | 38 |
| 3 | Water insecurity and mental health in the Amazon: Economic and ecological drivers of distress | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2019 | 37 |
| 4 | Translating to risk: The legibility of climate change and nature in the green bond market | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2017 | 31 |
| 5 | “It is easy for women to ask!”: Gender and digital finance in Kenya | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 30 |
| 6 | Unearthing human progress? Ecomodernism and contrasting definitions of technological progress in the Anthropocene | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2016 | 29 |
| 7 | Naming Brazil's previously poor: “New middle class” as an economic, political, and experiential category | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 28 |
| 8 | Making money in Mesoamerica: Currency production and procurement in the Classic Maya financial system | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 28 |
| 9 | Frontier financialization: Urban infrastructure in the United Kingdom | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 28 |
| 10 | Communities of energy | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2016 | 27 |
| 11 | Citizens of a hydropower nation: Territory and agency at the frontiers of hydropower development in Nepal | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2016 | 27 |
| 12 | A subtle economy of time: Social media and the transformation of Indonesia's Islamic preacher economy | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2017 | 26 |
| 13 | Production for consumption: Prosumer, citizen‐consumer, and ethical consumption in a postgrowth context | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 25 |
| 14 | Capital market development in Southeast Asia: From speculative crisis to spectacles of financialization | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 24 |
| 15 | The economic anthropology of water | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2019 | 24 |
| 16 | Greed Is Bad, Neutral, and Good: A Historical Perspective on Excessive Accumulation and Consumption | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2014 | 24 |
| 17 | Crypto‐miners: Digital labor and the power of blockchain technology | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2019 | 23 |
| 18 | Hearthholds of mobile money in western Kenya | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2016 | 22 |
| 19 | Finance beyond function: Three causal explanations for financialization | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 22 |
| 20 | Alternative economic strategies and the technology treadmill: Beginning vegetable farmers in Iowa | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2016 | 20 |
| 21 | A space for secondhand goods: Trading the remnants of material life in Hong Kong | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2017 | 19 |
| 22 | Constructing the female coffee farmer: Do corporate smart‐economic initiatives promote gender equity within agricultural value chains? | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2019 | 18 |
| 23 | Does ecosystem services valuation reflect local cultural valuations? Comparative analysis of resident perspectives in four major urban river ecosystems | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2019 | 18 |
| 24 | Inside the halo zone: Geology, finance, and the corporate performance of profit in a deep tight oil formation | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2016 | 17 |
| 25 | The infrastructure of markets: From electric power to electronic data | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2016 | 17 |
| 26 | Embodied value: Wealth‐in‐people | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2020 | 17 |
| 27 | Energy and economy: Recognizing high‐energy modernity as a historical period | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2016 | 16 |
| 28 | Trading on risk: The moral logics and economic reasoning of North Carolina farmers in water quality trading markets | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2017 | 16 |
| 29 | Becoming with rainwater: A study of hydrosocial relations and subjectivity in a desert city | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2019 | 16 |
| 30 | Entrepreneurship as legacy building: Reimagining the economy in post‐apartheid South Africa | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2020 | 15 |
| 31 | Amazon Go, surveillance capitalism, and the ideology of convenience | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2021 | 15 |
| 32 | Introducing an anthropology of convenience | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2021 | 15 |
| 33 | Petit capitalisms in disaster, or the limits of neoliberal imagination: Displacement, recovery, and opportunism in highland Ecuador | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 14 |
| 34 | Booms and Busts: Asset Dynamics, Disaster, and the Politics of Wealth in Rural Mongolia | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2014 | 14 |
| 35 | Wastewater technopolitics on the southern coast of Belize | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2019 | 13 |
| 36 | Debt as a double-edged risk: A historical case from Nahua (Aztec) Mexico | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2017 | 12 |
| 37 | Oil in Sicily: Petrocapitalist imaginaries in the shadow of old smokestacks | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 12 |
| 38 | The work of class: Cash transfers and community development in Tanzania | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2021 | 12 |
| 39 | Understanding money; Or, why social and financial accounting should not be conflated | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2024 | 12 |
| 40 | The Conflation of Participatory Budgeting and Public–Private Partnerships in Porto Alegre, Brazil: The Construction of a Working‐Class Mall for Street Hawkers | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2015 | 11 |
| 41 | Making Africa middle class: From poverty reduction to the production of inequality in Tanzania | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2015 | 11 |
| 42 | The role of corporate oil and energy debt in creating the neoliberal era | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2016 | 11 |
| 43 | Drivers and deterrents of entrepreneurial enterprise in the risk‐prone Global South | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2017 | 11 |
| 44 | Financialization of work, value, and social organization among transnational soy farmers in the Brazilian Cerrado | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2018 | 11 |
| 45 | “Water is a gift that destroys”: Making a national natural resource in Lesotho | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2019 | 11 |
| 46 | Loci of Greed in a Caribbean Paradise: Land Conflicts in Bocas del Toro, Panama | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2014 | 11 |
| 47 | The Potentiality and the Consequences of Surplus: Agricultural Production and Institutional Transformation in the Northern Basin of Mexico | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2014 | 11 |
| 48 | The taboo of retreat: The politics of sea level rise, managed retreat, and coastal property values in California | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2022 | 11 |
| 49 | Inequalities beyond the Gini: Subsistence, social structure, gender, and markets in southwestern Madagascar | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2015 | 10 |
| 50 | Unsettling Urban Marketplace Redevelopment in Baguio City, Philippines | Economic Anthropology (Hoboken, N J ) | 2015 | 10 |