204 Pages
by
Routledge
204 Pages
by
Routledge
208 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
First published in 1995. Since its establishment as a separate discipline within the social sciences in the post-war world, development sociology has undergone a number of theoretical transformations, each of which attempted to overcome the inadequacies of the previous paradigm and a matter of academic debate, but many writers agree that the discipline has reached something of an impasse. This... Read more
Chapter 1 Introduction: The impasse summarized; Part 1 The theoretical impasse; Chapter 2 Marx and development; Chapter 3 Modernization, dependency and development; Chapter 4 Structuralist Marxism and development; Part 2 The impasse and the contemporary global political economy; Chapter 5 The impasse and Third World industrialization; Chapter 6 The politics of the impasse I: states and markets in the development process; Chapter 7 The politics of the impasse II: challenging Third Worldism; Chapter 8 Conclusion;
Biography
Ray Kiely University of East London






