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The great merit and originality of this book lies in the fact that it analyzes the process of the creation of the Marxist theory of dependency by investigating the writings of its founders, now deceased, and through the current reflections of several of its closest collaborators. The current generations of students and researchers may not know this theory and its significance or only have a vague idea about it because it was formulated more than half a century ago and was displaced by the neoliberal dogmatic turn. I invite you to read this book to respond to current challenges by rescuing and renewing Latin American critical thinking (Cristobal Kay).
Dependency Theory --- 20th century --- Latin America --- Social Thought
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The great merit and originality of this book lies in the fact that it analyzes the process of the creation of the Marxist theory of dependency by investigating the writings of its founders, now deceased, and through the current reflections of several of its closest collaborators. The current generations of students and researchers may not know this theory and its significance or only have a vague idea about it because it was formulated more than half a century ago and was displaced by the neoliberal dogmatic turn. I invite you to read this book to respond to current challenges by rescuing and renewing Latin American critical thinking (Cristobal Kay).
History of the Americas --- Dependency Theory --- 20th century --- Latin America --- Social Thought --- Dependency Theory --- 20th century --- Latin America --- Social Thought
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The great merit and originality of this book lies in the fact that it analyzes the process of the creation of the Marxist theory of dependency by investigating the writings of its founders, now deceased, and through the current reflections of several of its closest collaborators. The current generations of students and researchers may not know this theory and its significance or only have a vague idea about it because it was formulated more than half a century ago and was displaced by the neoliberal dogmatic turn. I invite you to read this book to respond to current challenges by rescuing and renewing Latin American critical thinking (Cristobal Kay).
History of the Americas --- Dependency Theory --- 20th century --- Latin America --- Social Thought
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Dependencies - directed labeled graph structures representing hierarchical relations between morphemes, words, and semantic units - are the standard representation in many fields of computational linguistics. The linguistic significance of these structures often remains vague, however, and those working in the field stress the need for the development of a common notational and formal basis. Although dependency analysis has become quasi-hegemonic in Natural Language Processing (NLP), the connection between computational linguistics and dependency linguists remains sporadic. But theoretical dep
Computational linguistics. --- Natural language processing (Computer science) --- NLP (Computer science) --- Artificial intelligence --- Electronic data processing --- Human-computer interaction --- Semantic computing --- Automatic language processing --- Language and languages --- Language data processing --- Linguistics --- Natural language processing (Linguistics) --- Applied linguistics --- Cross-language information retrieval --- Mathematical linguistics --- Multilingual computing --- Data processing --- Computational dependency --- Dependency theory --- Dependency linguistics --- Depling
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How a group of intellectuals and policymakers transformed development economics and gave Latin America a new position in the world. After the Second World War demolished the old order, a group of economists and policymakers from across Latin America imagined a new global economy and launched an intellectual movement that would eventually capture the world. They charged that the systems of trade and finance that bound the world’s nations together were frustrating the economic prospects of Latin America and other regions of the world. Through the UN Economic Commission for Latin America, or CEPAL, the Spanish and Portuguese acronym, cepalinos challenged the orthodoxies of development theory and policy. Simultaneously, they demanded more not less trade, more not less aid, and offered a development agenda to transform both the developed and the developing world. Eventually, cepalinos established their own form of hegemony, outpacing the United States and the International Monetary Fund as the agenda setters for a region traditionally held under the orbit of Washington and its institutions. By doing so, cepalinos reshaped both regional and international governance and set an intellectual agenda that still resonates today. Drawing on unexplored sources from the Americas and Europe, Margarita Fajardo retells the history of dependency theory, revealing the diversity of an often-oversimplified movement and the fraught relationship between cepalinos, their dependentista critics, and the regional and global Left. By examining the political ventures of dependentistas and cepalinos, The World That Latin America Created is a story of ideas that brought about real change.
Dependency. --- Economic development --- HISTORY / Latin America / General. --- Development, Economic --- Economic growth --- Growth, Economic --- Economic policy --- Economics --- Statics and dynamics (Social sciences) --- Development economics --- Resource curse --- Center-periphery relations --- Core-periphery relations --- Dependent nations --- Colonies --- Imperialism --- History --- E-books --- United Nations. --- Western countries --- Latin America --- Dependency on Latin America. --- Economic policy. --- Economic conditions --- C.E.P.A.L. --- CEPAL --- E.C.L.A. --- ECLA --- Economic Commission for Latin America --- Occident --- West (Western countries) --- Western nations --- Western world --- Developed countries --- Alliance for Progress. --- Andre Gunder Frank. --- Aníbal Pinto. --- Brazil. --- Celso Furtado. --- Chile. --- Fernando Henrique Cardoso. --- Global South. --- International Monetary Fund. --- Latin America. --- Raúl Prebisch. --- capitalism. --- center-periphery. --- dependency theory. --- developing countries. --- development. --- economic policy. --- economics. --- foreign aid. --- history. --- inflation. --- international economic order. --- international organizations. --- international trade. --- underdevelopment.
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Etel Solingen provides a comprehensive explanation of foreign policy based on how states throughout the world have confronted the rapid emergence of a global economy and international institutions. A major advance in international relations theory, Regional Orders at Century's Dawn skillfully uses a key issue--internationalization--to clarify other recent debates, from the notion of a democratic peace to the relevance of security dilemmas, nationalism, and the impact of international institutions. The author discusses in rich detail the Middle East, Latin America's Southern Cone, and the Korean peninsula, and builds on examples drawn from almost every other region of the world.As Solingen demonstrates, economic liberalization--with its dramatic political and economic consequences--invariably attracts supporters and detractors, who join in coalitions to advance their agendas. Each coalition's agenda, or "grand strategy," has consequences at all levels: domestic, regional, and international. At home, coalitions struggle to define the internal allocation and management of resources, and to undermine their rivals. Throughout their regional neighborhoods, coalitions opposing internationalization often compete for dominance, sometimes militarily. Coalitions favoring internationalization, instead, often cooperate. At the global level, each coalition finds support for its "grand strategies" from different international institutions and from competing global economic trends. Solingen's concept of "grand strategy" proposes more than a theory of foreign policy and explains the role of nationalism and ethno-religious revivalism in the politics of liberalization.
International relations. --- International relations --- POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General. --- Algerian coup (1991). --- Aloni, Shulamit. --- Amman Summit (1995). --- Arab Cooperation Council. --- Arab Maghreb Union. --- Arab-Israeli Wars. --- Arafat, Yassir. --- Asian values myth. --- Ayatollah Khomeini. --- Beagle Channel conflict. --- Begin, Menachem. --- Ben-Gurion, Prime Minister. --- Bosnian debacle (1990s). --- Brazilian-Paraguayan Itaipú project. --- Casablanca Declaration (1994). --- Chun Doo Hwan. --- Clinton administration. --- Cruzado plan (Brazil). --- Davos conference (1997). --- Ecuador. --- Gourevitch, Peter. --- Greater Israel myth. --- Gulf War (1991). --- Harkabi, Yehoshafat. --- Hub-and-Spoke model. --- India-Pakistan War. --- Khamenei, Ali. --- Kim Kyong-hui. --- Korean National Youth (South Korea). --- Lanusse, Alejandro. --- Levingston, Roberto. --- Mendoza Accord (1991). --- Multipartidaria (Argentina). --- Nuclear Suppliers Group. --- Partido da Frente Liberal (Brazil). --- Quadripartite Agreement. --- counterfactuals. --- democratic advantage theory. --- democratic-peace policies. --- dependency theory. --- economic freedom. --- ethnic diversity. --- former Soviet Union. --- fundamentalism. --- imperial strategy. --- macroeconomic stability. --- macropolitical consensus. --- national-security states. --- nondemocratic peace. --- oil crisis (1970s). --- pacific unions. --- Coexistence --- Foreign affairs --- Foreign policy --- Foreign relations --- Global governance --- Interdependence of nations --- International affairs --- Peaceful coexistence --- World order --- National security --- Sovereignty --- World politics
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