Ciencia E Imperialismo En America Latina

Ciencia E Imperialismo En America Latina

Author: Cuvi Nicolas

Publisher: Editorial Academica Espanola

Published: 2011-05-17

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 9783844337761

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Durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial Estados Unidos ejecuto en America Latina ambiciosos programas para explotar materias primas minerales, vegetales y animales, que requirieron la intervencion de todo su potencial cientifico. Estos programas significaron el inicio de un tipo de intervencion estadounidense en Latinoamerica caracterizada por una activa participacion del Estado en las negociaciones, por la construccion de una dependencia de tecnologia estadounidense en el sur, y porque se oriento los programas agricolas de las naciones latinoamericanas hacia los productos "complementarios," aquellos que Estados Unidos no podia producir en su territorio. Fue asi como se consolidaron las bases del imperialismo sobre las materias primas ejercido por Estados Unidos en America Latina desde la segunda mitad del siglo XX. En este trabajo se profundiza sobre los mecanismos para la explotacion de recursos vegetales iniciados durante ese periodo, enfatizando en los casos de la corteza medicinal de la quina (estrategica para las actividades de guerra) y de las estaciones agricolas cooperativas.


A Living Past

A Living Past

Author: John Soluri

Publisher: Berghahn Books

Published: 2018-02-19

Total Pages: 310

ISBN-13: 1785333917

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Though still a relatively young field, the study of Latin American environmental history is blossoming, as the contributions to this definitive volume demonstrate. Bringing together thirteen leading experts on the region, A Living Past synthesizes a wide range of scholarship to offer new perspectives on environmental change in Latin America and the Spanish Caribbean since the nineteenth century. Each chapter provides insightful, up-to-date syntheses of current scholarship on critical countries and ecosystems (including Brazil, Mexico, the Caribbean, the tropical Andes, and tropical forests) and such cross-cutting themes as agriculture, conservation, mining, ranching, science, and urbanization. Together, these studies provide valuable historical contexts for making sense of contemporary environmental challenges facing the region.


Charting a New Course

Charting a New Course

Author: Fernando Henrique Cardoso

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 356

ISBN-13: 9780742508934

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For decades F. H. Cardoso has been among the most influential of Latin American scholars, his writings on globalization, dependency, and politics having reached a world-wide audience. This book, the third by Cardoso to appear in English, is the first to incorporate essays written during his tenure as president of Brazil. The transformation of Cardoso's economic and political approach is nowhere better documented than in this broad-ranging collection of writings that span Cardoso's early theoretical work through his pragmatic agenda for Brazil in a rapidly changing world economy. The book also traces the development of one of the world's leading intellectuals, who took theory into the arena of policy when he became head of state.


Aníbal Quijano

Aníbal Quijano

Author: Deni Alfaro Rubbo

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2024-09-09

Total Pages: 203

ISBN-13: 1040113214

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One of the prominent thinkers in the Social Sciences, Aníbal Quijano (1930–2018), has a fundamental work for the compression of contemporary dilemmas since his main theoretical and political concerns have always been linked to the mutations of world capitalism and its reverse paths. This book aims to contribute with analyses of his voluminous and diversified production distributed practically over 60 years of intellectual trajectory. In the first decades, the Peruvian author produced essential works on peasant movements, the urbanization process, and the class structure in Peru and Latin America by mobilizing sociological categories such as marginality, dependency and structural heterogeneity. He devoted himself to investigating imperialist domination in Peru and its implications for social classes and created the journal Sociedad y Política. In the 1990s and 2000s, the Peruvian sociologist published a set of texts on the coloniality and decoloniality of power, which represents a theoretical construction inseparable from the processes and experiences that were occurring in Peru, Latin America and the world, from the “globalization” of “neoliberalism” to global and local resistances. Thus, this book is addressed to all those, with or without specialized training in social sciences, interested in knowing not only the history of social sciences in Latin America but mainly in understanding the historical roots and the political dilemmas of peripheral capitalist societies.


Dependency Theories in Latin America

Dependency Theories in Latin America

Author: André Magnelli

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2024-08-12

Total Pages: 227

ISBN-13: 1040113338

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This book offers a discussion of the origins of Latin American dependency theories and their implications for contemporary social theory. The book explores the conditions of emergence of this intellectual movement, the trajectories of some of its main formulators, as well as the circulation of their ideas, their reception in other contexts, and their influence on other theoretical formulations and problems of the present. The book is aimed at social scientists interested in broadening the scope of social theory towards the Global South, in processes of knowledge circulation between central and semi-peripheral regions, as well as in understanding the problems of dependency, modernisation, and development processes in Latin America. The book can be used both as an introduction to these themes and to delve deeper into specific issues.


Author:

Publisher: IICA Biblioteca Venezuela

Published:

Total Pages: 884

ISBN-13:

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