Power and inequality in global value chains: Advancing the research agendaStefano Ponte, Jennifer Bair, Mark Dallaspp.: 679–686
The globalization of production, national labour regulations and income inequality in the global North and South, 1980–2013Anthony Roberts, Thai Binh Tranpp.: 687–714
Power and its sources in the governance of global value chains: The Argentina-European Union biodiesel value chainJuan Ignacio Stariccopp.: 715–731
Unpaid labour and territorial extraction in digital value networksKelle Howson, Hannah Johnston, Matthew Cole, Fabian Ferrari, Funda Ustek-Spilda, Mark Grahampp.: 732–754
Linking power and inequality in global value chainsJuliane Lang, Stefano Ponte, Thando Vilakazipp.: 755–771
Supplying lead firms, intangible assets and power in global value chains: Explaining governance in the fertilizer chainGideon Tups, Peter Dannenbergpp.: 772–791
Power in consensus: Legitimacy, global value chains and inequality in telecommunications standard‐settingMark P. Dallas, Jing-Ming Shiupp.: 792–813
Power, governance and distributional skew in global value chains: Exchange theoretic and exogenous factorsJennifer Bair, Matthew C Mahutgapp.: 814–831
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
From local champions to global players: A long‐term perspective on Swiss companies’ connections across territorial scalesMichael Andrea Strebel, André Machpp.: 832–848
Transnational families: The experiences of Polish stayers from a lifelong perspectiveMałgorzata Dziekońskapp.: 849–863
Quod vadis? The effect of youth unemployment and demographic pressure on migration in the MENA regionMargarete Redlinpp.: 864–883
Overcoming the mobility bias in transnational entrepreneurshipEkaterina Vorobevapp.: 884–900
Gateway cities for transnational higher education? Doha, Dubai and Ras al‐Khaimah as regional amplifiers in networks of the ‘global knowledge‐based economy’Tim Rottlebpp.: 901–917
ERRATUM
Corrigendum to overcoming interruptions in educational trajectories: Youth in Ghana with international migrant parentspp.: 918