Development and Globalization

Regular price €64.99
A01=David F Ruccio
analysis
Author_David F Ruccio
capitalist
Capitalist Class Processes
Capitalist Fundamental Class Process
Category=GTQ
Category=JP
Category=KCM
Category=KCP
class
Class Process
Communal Class Process
Communist Class Process
critical perspectives on global capitalism
debt crisis analysis
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
fundamental
Fundamental Class Position
Fundamental Class Process
labor
marxian
Marxian Class Analysis
Nicaraguan State
Noncapitalist Class
Noncapitalist Class Processes
Nonclass Processes
Nonclass Revenue
North American Free Trade Agreement
optimal
Optimal Planners
Optimal Planning Problems
Optimal Planning Theory
political economy theory
process
processes
regulation approach
socialist planning models
Subsumed Class
Subsumed Class Distributions
Subsumed Class Payments
Subsumed Class Positions
Subsumed Class Processes
Subsumed Class Revenues
surplus
Surplus Labor Appropriation
transitional economies research
underdevelopment critique
Worker Peasant Alliance

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415772266
  • Weight: 657g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Sep 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Since the mid-1980s, David F. Ruccio has been developing a new framework of Marxian class analysis and applying it to various issues in socialist planning, Third World development, and capitalist globalization. The aim of this collection is to show, through a series of concrete examples, how Marxian class analysis can be used to challenge existing modes of thought and to produce new insights about the problems of capitalist development and the possibilities of imagining and creating noncapitalist economies.

The book consists of fifteen essays, plus an introductory chapter situating the author’s work in a larger intellectual and political context. The topics covered range from planning theory to the role of the state in the Nicaraguan Revolution, from radical theories of underdevelopment to the Third World debt crisis, and from a critical engagement with regulation theory to contemporary discussions of globalization and imperialism.

David F. Ruccio is Professor of Economics at the University of Notre Dame, USA