Soviet-Third World relations in a capitalist world : the political economy of broken promises

書誌事項

Soviet-Third World relations in a capitalist world : the political economy of broken promises

Ellen Brun and Jacques Hersh

Macmillan in association with the Danish International Development Agency, 1990

この図書・雑誌をさがす
注記

Bibliography: p. 301-322

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book has been organized around four different approaches: the first involves tracing the roots of Soviet concepts of the Third World within the Marxist tradition. The second approach is a discussion of Soviet attitudes to the capitalist world market as they evolved from the early Bolshevik period up to the present commitment to integration. The third approach is an attempt to present the evolution of internal structures in the USSR: class-formation, economic or institutional structures, ie an attempt is made to relate internal relations of production and ideology to the policy followed vis-a-vis the capitalist world system. These three approaches correspond to the three first chapters of the book, or part 1. The fourth approach - identical to part 2 of the study - is a discussion of Soviet-Third World relations under presently existing conditions. The conclusion, finally, summarizes some of the main arguments, linking them together in order to form a new pattern of comprehension. It also points to various questions which the study gives rise to.

目次

  • Part 1 Approaches to understanding the Soviet-third world connection: Marxism
  • the Third World and the Soviet perspective
  • the shift in Marx's view
  • groping for an anti-capitalist strategy on the world scale
  • the second international and colonialism
  • the Third International
  • the Bolsheviks and the colonial question
  • the Leninist legacy
  • internationalism and the Soviet State
  • the post World War II period
  • end of the Stalin period
  • new Soviet assertiveness
  • the natural ally
  • the Leninist mutation
  • the concept of international dictatorship
  • the doctrine of limited sovereignty
  • world market discussion
  • isolation or integration?
  • great expectations
  • dispute over Socialism in one country
  • a modus vivendi develops
  • the post-war economy
  • a Socialist "world market"
  • Socialist "market" rejected
  • the desire for integration
  • China's experience and Korean self-reliance
  • back to where we came from?
  • socialism in one country and capital accumulation - constitution of the party and State
  • "Socialist accumulation" and the peasantry
  • industry and the workers
  • the "class-in-the process-of-becoming"
  • the organized consensus
  • organizing inequality
  • geographical stratification
  • Soviet development strategy
  • the military-industrial complex
  • the question of outdated production relations
  • the crisis
  • the Soviet experience in perspective
  • restructuring Soviet society. Part 2 Soviet-third world relations in the world system: the gradual realignment of global forces
  • the image
  • the natural ally
  • the evolution of Soviet-third world relations - the first expansive period
  • financial conditions of Soviet credits
  • the period 1965 to 1975
  • the general evolution of trade
  • the question of aid
  • technical assistance
  • economic pragmatism and new "militancy"
  • the paradigm shift in development theory
  • the collision with Third World demands
  • the law of the sea
  • the new international economic order
  • politics before economics
  • the pattern of exchange
  • the problem of world market prices
  • exploiting a superior bargaining position
  • a practice in search of justification
  • arms trade and military aid - the first experience
  • military aid and economic expediency
  • the creation of new forms of dependence
  • export of military facilities
  • support for military regimes
  • the internal link
  • the projection of naval power
  • East-West competition seen from the South
  • internationalization of capital and the USSR. (Part contents)

「Nielsen BookData」 より

ページトップへ