Listing 1 - 2 of 2 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
"The question of the meaning of progress and development is back on the political agenda. How to frame this discontent and search for new alternatives when either socialism or liberalism no longer provides a satisfactory framework? This book introduces in an accessible way the capability approach, first articulated by Amartya Sen in the early 1980s. Written for an international audience, but rooted in the Latin American reality - a region with a history of movements for social justice - the book argues that the capability approach provides to date, the most encompassing and promising ethical framework with which to construct action for improving people's wellbeing and reducing injustices in the world. Comprehensive, practical and nuanced in its treatment of the capability approach, this highly original volume gives students, researchers and professionals in the field of development an innovative framing of the capability approach as a 'language' for action and provides specific examples of how it has made a difference"--
Microeconomics --- Economic conditions. Economic development --- Economic sociology --- Economic development --- Social justice --- Welfare economics --- Moral and ethical aspects --- Social aspects --- Economic development - Moral and ethical aspects --- Economic development - Social aspects - Latin America --- Social justice - Latin America --- Welfare economics - Latin America
Choose an application
"This book tells the history of Latin America's cultural Cold War through an interwoven analysis of three organizations that targeted influential artists, scholars, and writers: the CIA-backed Congress for Cultural Freedom, the Soviet-aligned World Peace Council, and Cuba's Casa de las Américas. The author argues that in spite of their status as 'front' groups for the interests of the United States, the Soviet Union, and revolutionary Cuba, respectively, these organizations were both the creation of foreign interventions and of preexisting currents of the Latin American left that held a variety of conflicting views about how to bring about greater social justice. The book thus shows that even Cold War fronts could secure a measure of independence from their patrons, and that pro-democracy and egalitarian movements emerged from both the anti-Communist left and its pro-Communist counterparts. Yet each community eventually found that its sponsor's problems--those of Stalin, of the CIA, or of Fidel Castro--became its own. Rather than seeing the struggles of Latin America's left as the result of poor choices of strategy, the history of intellectuals' engagement with power shows that all available paths toward a more democratic and egalitarian Latin America required debilitating compromise, including with foreign empires. The relative lack of social democracy during Latin America's Cold War is therefore not a puzzle requiring explanation, but the predictable result of the intellectual and political problems faced by those who sought to achieve it"--
History of civilization --- International groups --- anno 1900-1999 --- Latin America --- Cold War --- Social justice --- Communism --- Democracy --- Political aspects --- Social aspects --- Congress for Cultural Freedom --- World Peace Council --- Casa de las Américas --- Politics and government --- Cold War - Political aspects - Latin America --- Cold War - Social aspects - Latin America --- Social justice - Latin America --- Communism - Latin America --- Democracy - Latin America --- Latin America - Politics and government - 1948-1980
Listing 1 - 2 of 2 |
Sort by
|