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546,196 artículos
Año:
1972
ISSN:
2448-6523, 0185-013X
Roger D. Hansen. The politics of Mexican development. Baltimore, Md. : The Johns Hopkins Press, 1971
Meyer Cosío, Lorenzo F
El Colegio de México A.C.
Resumen
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Año:
1972
ISSN:
0719-3769, 0716-0240
Echeverría Alvarez, Luis
Universidad de Chile. Instituto de Estudios Internacionales
Resumen
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Año:
1972
ISSN:
0719-3769, 0716-0240
Iglesias, Enrique V.
Universidad de Chile. Instituto de Estudios Internacionales
Resumen
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Año:
1972
ISSN:
0719-3769, 0716-0240
Clarkson, Stephen
Universidad de Chile. Instituto de Estudios Internacionales
Resumen
The enigma of contemporary Canada is why a society so technically developed, with such a high standard of living - though so dominated by a foreign power - has produced neither a national capitalist class nor a national intelligentsia that has the economic power and intellectual leadership to lead the country towards independence. This paper offers an explanation of why Canadian students, teachers, and authors failed to provide thought leadership in the face of the country's main external problem: its relationship with the United States. The matter can be summarized very simply. Canada, a transplanted nation with a branch economy, has not had a national intelligentsia in the sense is understood in most Latin American countries, but has had an academic structure implanted from outside, professionally incapable of responding to the problems of dependency of the nation.
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Año:
1972
ISSN:
0719-3769, 0716-0240
Niekerk, Arnold van
Universidad de Chile. Instituto de Estudios Internacionales
Resumen
Thanks to the recent publication in Europe of André Gunder Frank's work: "Capitalism and underdevelopment in Latin America", new horizons are opened that allow us to recognize the universality of underdevelopment that unites peripheral countries and makes them lose their individuality due to the effect leveling the exploitation and imperialism exercised by the central governing countries. The truth is that the sociology of knowledge has come to demonstrate that the characteristics of a continent such as Latin America originate less from a supposed regional particularity than from the insufficiency of communication systems and knowledge acquisition processes. The intention of this work is not to thwart an intellectual effort that has allowed a new way of seeing and understanding the Latin American reality, If not rather to point out its limitations as a theory.
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