Long run processes of socio-economic change generate prodigious problems of social conflict and social control, and governments responsible for these processes must therefore manage the resultant conflict. Consequently, the success or failure of a government's management of such conflicts is a crucial factor in development outcomes.
This volume investigates the political struggle for development specifically in two vital regions - East Asia and Latin America. This analysis calls into question the dominant emphasis on institutional and cultural bases for stable growth. A careful historical account of the two regions is presented, which permits the rigorous testing of conventional wisdoms regarding development. Of importance to a broad range of academics in the spheres of development studies, politics, political economy and sociology, this book will also make an interesting read for those with a general interest in these areas.
1. The Management of Political Conflict in East Asia and Latin America and its Consequences for Development
Richard Boyd 2. Possible and Impossible Games: the Transformation of Institutional Arrangements by Social Conflict in Argentina and Taiwan
Tak-Wing Ngo 3. Insulation for What? Beyomd the Economic Rationale for Technocratic Insulation in Chile and South Korea
Patricio Silva 4. Rents and Economic Outcomes in Mexico and Japan
Richard Boyd 5. Beneficiaries or Victims? State and Labour in the Development of South Korea and Brazil
Hagen Koo 6. Peasants, Landlords, and Land Reform: The Management of Agrarian Unrest
Cristobel Kay 7. Culture and Conflict: Trust and Institution-making
Benno Galjart 8.Conclusion
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