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Dependency Theory After Fifty Years Claudio Katz

Dependency Theory After Fifty Years By Claudio Katz

Dependency Theory After Fifty Years by Claudio Katz


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Dependency Theory After Fifty Years Summary

Dependency Theory After Fifty Years: The Continuing Relevance of Latin American Critical Thought by Claudio Katz

Dependency Theory After Fifty Years is an insightful and timely review of dependency theory, its strengths, weaknesses, and how to reinvent the concept for the modern day. Dependency theory as a framework initially included distinct forms of Marxism, liberalism, and developmentalism that should be differentiated, despite sharing the same name. In this important intervention, renowned scholar Claudio Katz argues that, while the concept has fallen out of favor, its postulates are being proven more and more true by present-day events. In Latin America, for example, the effects of dependency are more acutely felt than in the past, making it imperative to understand the logic of the region's peripheral subordination. In Dependency Theory After Fifty Years, Katz shows that in its original form Dependency Theory is incapable of providing a convincing explanation of contemporary reality; it must be updated to interpret the current modalities of dependent capitalism. This book offers analytical clues to beginning that reinvention. Recipient of the Libertador Prize for Critical Thought (2018).

About Claudio Katz

Claudio Katz is a research professor at the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina. He is the author of numerous books and articles on economics, politics, and Latin American society. His views are synthesized in Neoliberalismo, neo-desarrollismo, socialismo.

Table of Contents

Prologue part 1 Background 1 Marx and the Periphery 1 Cosmopolitan Socialism 2 Rebellions and Rethinking 3 Slavery and Oppression 4 Democracies and Communes 5 A New Paradigm 6 Convergence and Cleavages 7 Exogenous and Endogenous Causes 8 Liberal Interpretations 9 Varieties of Eurocentrism 10 People without History 11 Nations and Nationalism 12 State and Progress 13 Legacies 2 Underdevelopment in the Classical Marxists 1 Justifications for Colonialism 2 The Revolutionary Position 3 Rights to Self-Determination 4 Pillars of Anti-Imperialism 5 Uneven Development 6 Stages and Imperialism 7 The Function of the Periphery 8 Accumulation by Dispossession 9 Uneven and Combined Development 10 Challenges and Extensions 11 Enduring Concepts 3 Center and Periphery in Postwar Marxism 1 Deindustrialization and Surplus 2 Stagnation and Domination 3 Polemics with Liberalism 4 Amin's Five Theses 5 World Value and Polarization 6 Unequal Exchange 7 Dependency and Socialism 8 Collective Imperialism 9 Mandel's Perspective 10 Bifurcations and Neutralizations 11 Imbalances and Fluctuations 12 Socialist Convergences part 2 Development 4 The Rise of Dependency Theories 1 Socialism and Liberalism 2 Developmentalism and Marxism 3 The New Categories 4 Subimperialism and the National Bourgeoisie 5 Theories and Particularities 6 The Metropolis-Satellite Perspective 7 Two Different Approaches 8 Development and Dependency 9 Theoretical Confusion 10 An Illuminating Debate 11 Socio-liberal Regression 5 Critiques and Convergences 1 Functionalism without Subjects 2 Mechanical Exogenism 3 Problems of Pan-Capitalism 4 Methodological Singularity? 5 Perspectives on 'Popular Unity' in Chile 6 Endogenism: Traditional and Transformed 7 Agreement against Post-Marxism 8 Return to Dependency 9 The Opposite Path 10 Theoretical Synthesis 11 Methodological Convergence 12 Assessments and Declines 6 Dependency and World-System Theory 1 Cycles and Hegemonies 2 Orders and Hierarchies 3 Relationship to Dependency Theory 4 Convergences and Separations 5 Convergent Concepts 6 Systems or Modes of Production? 7 Terminal Crises and Social Subjects 8 Two Views on Long Cycles 9 Discrepancies on Socialism 10 Anti-imperialism and National Traditions 11 Only Now Is It Possible? 12 Political Strategies 7 Three Stages of the Metropolis-Satellite Perspective 1 Variety of Approaches 2 Controversies over Colonization 3 More Elaborate Answers 4 Commercial Capitalism 5 Political Simplifications 6 The Turn toward World-System Theory 7 Debates over the Proletariat 8 Long Transitions 9 The Missing Subject 10 Debates over the East 11 Problems with 'Asia-Centrism' 12 Misunderstanding Capitalism 13 Contemporary Influences 14 No Response to Dependency 8 Anti-dependency Arguments 1 Reformulating the Same Approach 2 Interdependence? 3 Simplified Comparisons 4 Stagnationism? 5 Monopolies and the Law of Value 6 Underdevelopment as a Simple Fact 7 Classifications and Examples 8 Argentina as a Developed Country? 9 Political Challenges 10 Marx, Lenin, Luxemburg 11 Mythical Proletariat 12 Globalist Socialism part 3 Concepts 9 Subimperialism i Review of a Concept 1 Foundations and Objections 2 Evaluation of a Concept 3 Another Context 4 Economic Interpretations 5 Reformulation of a Status 6 Controversial Extensions 7 Misunderstanding a Category 8 Comparison with Semi-Colony 9 Dogmatic Inconsistencies 10 Subimperialism ii Current Application 1 The Main Prototype 2 An Adventurous Experiment 3 An Uncertain Reconstitution 4 Co-imperial Appendages 5 Contrasting Situations 6 Peculiarities of Another Power 7 Empire in Formation 8 Another Variant in Formation 9 Is Brazil Subimperial Today? 10 Comparisons with Other Cases 11 Controversies over Application 12 Reconsideration and Usefulness 11 Insights and Problems of the Super-exploitation Concept 1 Logic and Interpretation 2 Compatible Objections 3 Low Value of Labor Power 4 Statistical Irresolution 5 The Centrality of Transfers 6 Dependency without Super-Exploitation 7 Variety of Uses 8 Super-exploitation with and without Marx 9 Absence of Fordism 10 Where Is Exploitation Greater? 11 Current Applications 12 A Tentative Model 13 Controversies over the Extension of Super-Exploitation 12 Similarities and Differences with the Age of Marini 1 Productive Globalization 2 Exploitation and Industrial Remodeling 3 The Crisis of Capitalism 4 Imperial Reformulations 5 The Collapse of the ussr and the Rise of China 6 Polarities and Neutralizations 7 Diverse Inequalities 8 Internationalization without a Political Counterpart 9 Problems of Transnationalism 10 Semi-peripheral Reordering 11 Extent of Subimperialism 12 Global South? 13 Renewing Dependency Theory 13 The Dependent Cycle Forty Years Later 1 Tensions and Crises 2 Industrial Regression, Obstruction to Consumption 3 Effects of Extractivism 4 Cycle and Crisis 5 The Contrast with Korea 6 Other Interpretations 7 Other Comparisons 8 Relation with China 9 Geopolitics, Classes, Governments 10 Determinants of Dependency 11 Reasons for Reconsideration 14 Dependency and the Theory of Value 1 Causes of Unequal Exchange 2 The Extent of Globalization 3 Productive Globalization 4 The Meaning of Intensified Labor 5 Monopoly and the Duality of Value 6 Misunderstanding Underdevelopment 7 Raw Material Cycles 8 The Reintroduction of Rent 9 Imperialist Rents 10 International Rent 11 Forced Incompatibilities 12 The Contrast with Venezuela 13 Totalizing Visions Epilogue References Index

Additional information

NGR9781642598131
9781642598131
1642598135
Dependency Theory After Fifty Years: The Continuing Relevance of Latin American Critical Thought by Claudio Katz
New
Paperback
Haymarket Books
2023-04-20
300
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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