Theories of development : mode of production or dependency?
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Bibliographic Information
Theories of development : mode of production or dependency?
(Class, state, & development, v. 2)
Sage Publications, c1983
- : pbk
Available at / 37 libraries
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
: pbk338.9||Ch 7511841111
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Dependency theory is currently being challenged by a fresh application of classic Marxist principles combined with thinking from Marxist structuralism. The result is a body of work that emphasizes the importance of the mode of production rather than markets or exchange relations. Essays from opposing viewpoints have been collected in this volume to study the Third World and discuss the progressive or regressive role of capitalism in developing countries -- whether production in them is capitalist or pre-capitalist, and re-emphasize the importance of class relations in development. As a review of the complex theoretical issues involved and the intellectual history behind them, the book has much to offer both specialists and students.
Table of Contents
Introduction - Roanald H Chilcote
Dependency or Mode of Production? Theoretical Issues
PART ONE: CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES
Imperialism and Progress - Aijaz Ahmad
Ideologies in Theories of Imperialism and Dependency - Carlos Johnson
PART TWO: CASE STUDIES IN DEPENDENCY AND MODES OF PRODUCTION ANALYSES
Imperialism, Social Classes, and the State in Peru, 1890-1930 - Anibal Quijano
Interpreting Social Change in Guatemala - Norma Stoltz Chinchilla
Modernization, Dependency, and Articulation of Modes of Production
PART THREE: WORLD-SYSTEM AND CLASS ANALYSES
Crisis and Transformation of Dependency in the World-System - Andre Gunder Frank
Surplus Labor and Class Formation on the Latin American Periphery - Henry Veltmeyer
Class Analysis and Dependency - Dale L Johnson
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