Imperialism Intervention and Development

Imperialism Intervention and Development

Doyle, Ursula; Plant, David; Mack, Andrew

Taylor & Francis Ltd

03/2021

406

Mole

Inglês

9781138384897

15 a 20 dias

760

Descrição não disponível.
Part I: Imperialism and Intervention 1. Introduction Section I: Decolonisation 2. Introduction 3. Anticolonial Nationalism and Western Response 4. Decolonisation Section II: The Cold War and Imperialism 5. Introduction 6. The Cold War and the Korean War 7. Did Anyone Start the Cold War? Section III: Counterrevolution and Revolt in the Third World 8. Introduction 9. Patterns of Intervention 10. Counterinsurgency in the Third World: Theory and Practice Part IV: Intervention and the Economic Imperatives of Capitalism 11. Introduction 12. Scarce Resources: The Dynamic of American Imperialism 13. Foreign Expansion as an 'Institutional Necessity' for Corporate Capitalism 14. Does the U.S. Require Imperialism? Part II: Imperialism and Development 15. Introduction Section V: Inside the Third World 16. Introduction 17. Social Perspectives 18. The Causes of Poverty: A Classification 19. The Rational Choice Section VI: Third World Poverty and the West 20. Introduction 21. The Radical Theory of Development 22. Radical Theories of Development: An Assessment 23. Outwitting the 'Developed Countries' Section VII: The World Population/Food Crisis 24. Introduction 25. How Poverty Breeds Overpopulation 26. The Reproduction Function 27. Era of Agricultural Scarcity Looms 28. Patriarchy is Alive and Well Section VIII: China's Developmental Approach 29. Introduction 30. The Chinese Approach to Development 31. China's Relevance for Third World Development
Postwar;United States;Imperialism;Follow;Intervention;North;Development;NATO;Decolonisation;Secretary Of State;Anticolonial;Vice Versa;Nationalism;UN;Western;Model III;Cold War;USA;Korean War;Young Men;Counterrevolution;Chinese Communist Party;Revolt;Ivory Coast;Third World;Institutional Necessity;Counterinsurgency;Central African Republic;Economic Imperitives;Model Ii;Capitalism;Modern Colonial Empires;American Imperialism;Negative Economic Sanctions;US Corporate Capitalism;Truman Doctrine;Poverty;Chronic;Radical Theory;Common Language;World Population;Guiana;Food Crisis;CIA;Overpopulation;NATO Ally;Reproduction Function;Military Control;Agriculture;China;China Development;U.S. counterinsurgency theory;U.S. corporate capitalism;economic development;anticolonial nationalism