“…Some contributions draw on established forms of capital, revealing, for example, how cultural and economic capital structure the transnational field of education policy (Mangez and Hilgers 2012), how transnational fields translate professional expertise into political capital (Schmidt-Wellenburg 2017), or how central bankers' positions in the global field of power are structured by political and economic capital (Lebaron 2008). Other studies identify new forms of capital, for example, ethnographic capital in the transnational field of colonial states (Steinmetz 2008), informational capital structuring the European field of security agencies (Bigo 2007), macro capital structuring the positions of countries, regions, or cities in a global field of cultural production (Buchholz 2018), literary capital in the global field of literature (Casanova 2004), and meta-capital structuring the relation among nation states in a global field of power (Schmitz, Heiberger, and Blasius 2015).…”