Description

Book Synopsis
For an additional chapter on health and human security: Click Here.For suggested resources for each chapter in the book: Click Here.For additional resources on ecological and social issues: Click Here.For additional resources on indigenous peoples: Click Here.Comprehensive and interdisciplinary, this thoroughly updated and revised second edition is an engaging critical analysis of the major political, economic, social, and ecological conditions in Latin America and the Caribbean. Genuinely regional in scope, this textbook examines the hemispheric and global context of these conditions as well as the relations among Latin American and Caribbean states and their relations with the United States. Expert contributors describe and analyze the economies and trading relations, politics and state policies, social inequalities and social injustices, indigenous communities, gender relations, influence of religion, wide array of social movements, and social ecology of the societies in this import

Trade Review
Recommended. * CHOICE *
The essays written by a host of recognized professionals in Latin America studies focus on rural transformation, underdevelopment, economic restructuring, Pan-American perspectives on governing, economic, and social systems, gender, identity, theology, ecology, globalization and regionalism, and other subjects. Their analysis of such subjects goes beyond causes and consequences. In many ways, their conclusions border on a prophetic view of Latin American's future. This book, while structured for classroom use, is recommended to readers interested in the subject. * Colonial Latin American Historical Review *
Together, all the eleven chapters in this book provide a general comparative framework for a deep analysis of Latin America and the Caribbean, demonstrating that Marxism still stands as a comprehensive and prosperous field for the development of a critical science, in particular if it is based on the integrative concepts of capital, power, and inequality. The multidimensional researches of the historical context and the contemporary structures of capital, power and inequality address an interdisciplinary texture of economic, political, and social changes in Latin America and the Caribbean that converts this must-read book into a valuable source for undergraduate and graduate students as well as for a broader public concerned with this region. * European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies *
The editors of this collection have brought together leading critical scholars with a wealth of experience behind them to provide an up-to-date survey of the main economic, political, and social aspects of contemporary Latin America. Recommended. -- Ronaldo Munck, Dublin City University
Provocative analyses that invert current orthodoxies. Reshapes how we think about social movements, rural societies, working class struggles, and indigenous peoples. -- Elizabeth Dore, University of Southampton
The first edition of Capital, Power, and Inequality in Latin America was prophetic, and this revision is even more important, especially in light of the pace and space of globalization. In the spirit of Andre Gunder Frank, it examines Latin America and globalization: the diverse alliances of women's organizations and the growth of new social movements, political parties, indigenous movements, and environmentalist groups. While it is clearly written and appropriate for undergraduates, its analytical focus will appeal to all scholars. -- Pat Lauderdale, Arizona State University

Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Capital, Power, and Inequality in Latin America and the Caribbean Chapter 2: Rural Transformation: Unequal Development and Persistent Poverty Chapter 3: Dependency, Underdevelopment, and Neoliberalism Chapter 4: Economic Restructuring, Neoliberalism, and the Working Class Chapter 5: Insecurity, Development, and Democracy: A Pan-American Perspective Chapter 6: The New Social Movements in Latin America and the Caribbean Chapter 7: Women in the Social, Political, and Economic Transformation of Latin America and the Caribbean Chapter 8: Indigenous Peoples: Changing Identities and Forms of Resistance Chapter 9: Liberation Theology, Christian Base Communities, and Solidarity Movements: A Historical Reflection Chapter 10: Ecological Crisis, Sustainable Development, and Capitalism Chapter 11: Globalization and Regionalization in the Americas

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      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
      Publication Date: 1/28/2008 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780742555235, 978-0742555235
      ISBN10: 0742555232

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      For an additional chapter on health and human security: Click Here.For suggested resources for each chapter in the book: Click Here.For additional resources on ecological and social issues: Click Here.For additional resources on indigenous peoples: Click Here.Comprehensive and interdisciplinary, this thoroughly updated and revised second edition is an engaging critical analysis of the major political, economic, social, and ecological conditions in Latin America and the Caribbean. Genuinely regional in scope, this textbook examines the hemispheric and global context of these conditions as well as the relations among Latin American and Caribbean states and their relations with the United States. Expert contributors describe and analyze the economies and trading relations, politics and state policies, social inequalities and social injustices, indigenous communities, gender relations, influence of religion, wide array of social movements, and social ecology of the societies in this import

      Trade Review
      Recommended. * CHOICE *
      The essays written by a host of recognized professionals in Latin America studies focus on rural transformation, underdevelopment, economic restructuring, Pan-American perspectives on governing, economic, and social systems, gender, identity, theology, ecology, globalization and regionalism, and other subjects. Their analysis of such subjects goes beyond causes and consequences. In many ways, their conclusions border on a prophetic view of Latin American's future. This book, while structured for classroom use, is recommended to readers interested in the subject. * Colonial Latin American Historical Review *
      Together, all the eleven chapters in this book provide a general comparative framework for a deep analysis of Latin America and the Caribbean, demonstrating that Marxism still stands as a comprehensive and prosperous field for the development of a critical science, in particular if it is based on the integrative concepts of capital, power, and inequality. The multidimensional researches of the historical context and the contemporary structures of capital, power and inequality address an interdisciplinary texture of economic, political, and social changes in Latin America and the Caribbean that converts this must-read book into a valuable source for undergraduate and graduate students as well as for a broader public concerned with this region. * European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies *
      The editors of this collection have brought together leading critical scholars with a wealth of experience behind them to provide an up-to-date survey of the main economic, political, and social aspects of contemporary Latin America. Recommended. -- Ronaldo Munck, Dublin City University
      Provocative analyses that invert current orthodoxies. Reshapes how we think about social movements, rural societies, working class struggles, and indigenous peoples. -- Elizabeth Dore, University of Southampton
      The first edition of Capital, Power, and Inequality in Latin America was prophetic, and this revision is even more important, especially in light of the pace and space of globalization. In the spirit of Andre Gunder Frank, it examines Latin America and globalization: the diverse alliances of women's organizations and the growth of new social movements, political parties, indigenous movements, and environmentalist groups. While it is clearly written and appropriate for undergraduates, its analytical focus will appeal to all scholars. -- Pat Lauderdale, Arizona State University

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1: Capital, Power, and Inequality in Latin America and the Caribbean Chapter 2: Rural Transformation: Unequal Development and Persistent Poverty Chapter 3: Dependency, Underdevelopment, and Neoliberalism Chapter 4: Economic Restructuring, Neoliberalism, and the Working Class Chapter 5: Insecurity, Development, and Democracy: A Pan-American Perspective Chapter 6: The New Social Movements in Latin America and the Caribbean Chapter 7: Women in the Social, Political, and Economic Transformation of Latin America and the Caribbean Chapter 8: Indigenous Peoples: Changing Identities and Forms of Resistance Chapter 9: Liberation Theology, Christian Base Communities, and Solidarity Movements: A Historical Reflection Chapter 10: Ecological Crisis, Sustainable Development, and Capitalism Chapter 11: Globalization and Regionalization in the Americas

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