Semiperipheral states in the world-economy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Semiperipheral states in the world-economy
(Studies in the political economy of the world-system)(Contributions in economics and economic history, no. 113)
Greenwood Press, 1990
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Note
"Product of the Thirteenth Annual Conference on the Political Economy of the World-System held at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in April 1989"--Acknowledgments
Cosponsored by the American Sociological Association and the University of Illinois's Dept. of Sociology
Bibliography: p. [225]-226
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
William G. Martin's Semiperipheral States in the World-Economy diverges sharply from past international labor division interpretations of semiperipheral development. Martin emphasizes the importance of each country's individual conditions. Linking each example, however, is the theory that there is a relatively rare set of conditions that make economic, political, and social advancement of the semiperipheral states successful or even possible.
Martin and the contributing writers present the thesis that mobility of semiperipheral states to the core world-economy is a very rare phenomenon. Indeed, they even go so far as to suggest that it is the very set of social and institutional ruptures that were necessary to achieve semiperipheral status which often create the social and political forces that prevent any further advance. Economic pressure from core nations and intense competition within the semiperiphery are cited as being foremost among these factors. Such general topics occupy the first few chapters of the book, while the later chapters examine specific semiperipheral countries in depth. The final interpretation provides a better understanding of this segment of the world-economy and of the transformational possibilities of the capitalist world itself. Students of both world-economy and the social and political conditions of the semiperiphery will find this an invaluable study.
Table of Contents
Series Foreword by Immanuel Wallerstein
The Place of the Semiperiphery in the Modern World-System
Introduction: The Challenge of the Semiperiphery by William G. Martin
The Developmentalist Illusion: A Reconceptualization of the Semiperiphery by Giovanni Arrighi
Semiperipheral Success Stories?
Commodity Chains and Footwear Exports in the Semiperiphery by Gary Gereffi and Miguel Korzeniewicz
State, Market and Agriculture in Pinochet's Chile by Walter Goldfrank
Limits on a Semiperipheral Success Story? State Dependent Development and the Prospects for South Korean Democratization by David A. Smith and Su- Hoon Lee
The Limits of Semiperipheral Development: Argentina in the Twentieth Century by Roberto P. Korzeniewicz
Semiperiphery or Core?
The Republic of Ireland in the World-Economy: An Exploration of Dynamics in the Semiperiphery by Richard Grant and Donald Lyons
Periphery in the Center: Canada in the North American Economy by Jorge Niosi
Ethnicity: Propelling or Checking Advance?
The Contradictions of Semiperipheral "Success": The Case of Israel by Beverly Silver
Ethnic Divisions and State Centered Development: Malaysia and Nigeria Compared by Paul M. Lubeck and Donna Rae Palmer
From NIC to NUC: South Africa's Semiperipheral Regimes by William G. Martin
Bibliography
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"