Description
Book SynopsisThe author clarifies the mutually constructive relationship between transnational and the modernizing Peruvian state, showing how the state maintains this relationship while simultaneously nurturing the new class. Originally published in 1983. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previous
Table of Contents*FrontMatter, pg. i*Contents, pg. vii*List of Tables, pg. ix*List of Figures, pg. xi*Glossary of Acronyms, pg. xiii*Foreword, pg. xvii*Preface, pg. xxi*CHAPTER ONE. Development, Class, and Dependency, pg. 3*CHAPTER TWO. Peru: Un Pais Minero, pg. 17*CHAPTER THREE. Mining Policy and Policymaking after 1968, pg. 49*CHAPTER FOUR. World Industries and World Markets in Nonferrous Metals, pg. 72*CHAPTER FIVE. Southern Peru Copper versus an Assertive State: The Cuajone Project, pg. 97*CHAPTER SIX. The Decline and Fall of Cerro de Pasco, pg. 132*CHAPTER SEVEN. The Medium-Mining Subsector, pg. 171*CHAPTER EIGHT. Parastatal Enterprise in Peruvian Mining, pg. 201*CHAPTER NINE. The Bourgeoisie and Middle Class of the Mineria, pg. 237*CHAPTER TEN. The Mining Industry and the Claims of Labor, pg. 279*CHAPTER ELEVEN. The New Bourgeoisie and the Limits of Dependency, pg. 323*APPENDIX A. Miscellaneous Data, pg. 345*APPENDIX B. Mining Policy Guidelines and Legislation of the Military Regime, pg. 354*APPENDIX C. A Comparison of Key Provisions of the Toquepala and Cuajone Basic Agreements, pg. 361*APPENDIX D. Statutory Rights and Privileges of Peruvian Mine Workers, pg. 365*Bibliography, pg. 369*Index, pg. 409