-
Adams, Patrica. 1991. Odious
Debts: Loose Lending, Corruption, And The
Third World's Environmental
Legacy. London: Earthscan.
Auvinen, Juha Y. 1996.
"IMF Intervention and Political Protest in the
Third World: A
Conventional Wisdom Refined," Third World
Quarterly, v17n3 (Sep
1996): 377-400.
-
[Statistical analysis of the
literature criticizing IMFís
austerity-driven adjustment
policies. Assesses sources of
resistance.]
Avery,
William P. 1990. "The Origins of Debt Accumulation among LDCs in
the
World Political Economy," The Journal of Developing Areas,
v24n4
(Jul 1990): 503-522.
-
[Discusses the endogenous
and exogenous determinants of
indebtedness. Role of IMF and lender, as
credit-rater, and as policy
enforcer.]
Bagchi,
Amiya Kumar. 1982. The Political Economy of
Underdevelopment.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Browne, Harry.
1994. For Richer, For Poorer: Shaping U.S.Mexican
Integration.
The U.S.Mexico Series, No. 4. Albuquerque, NM: Resource
Center Press;
London: Latin America Bureau.
-
["The US-Mexico
economic partnership has become a highly
influential model for the rest
of the world. However, the neoliberal
economic policies which have
cleared the way for booming crossborder
trade and investment are
wreaking havoc on workers and small businesses.
(The book) explains the
nuts and bolts of globalization and free trade
(and) offers alternative
strategies that can promote business interests
while still protecting
workers' rights and the environment."]
Cavanagh,
John & Daphne Wysham & Marcos Arruda (eds.). 1994.
Beyond
Bretton Woods: Alternatives to the Global Economic Order.
Boulder,
CO: Pluto Press.
-
["An excellent anthology by
over twenty economists and
researchers which reviews the history and
policies of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank . The
contributing authors offer
engaging ideas for reforms in order to
confront the economic devastation
that these organizations have created
in the Third World."]
Chaliand, Gerard. Undated .
"Third World,"
http://www.infoasis.com/people/stevetwt/General/Third%20World_def.ht
ml
-
[Definition, description,
characteristics, global political
history, and prospects. Slanted but
useful account of the development of
underdevelopment and the growth of
poverty.]
Chase-Dunn, Christopher. 1993. Global
Formation: Structures of the
World Economy. Oxford: Blackwell.
Danaher, Kevin (ed.) 1994. 50 Years Is Enough: The Case
Against the
World Bank. Boston: South End Press.
-
["A collection of over 30 essays by professional scholars,
examines the structure and purpose of the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund, and how they have contributed to the debt burden and
economic devastation in the South. The book offers case studies from
various third world countries, ranging from the vast foreign debt in
Brazil and agricultural structural adjustment in Costa Rica to
postapartheid neoliberalism in South Africa. It also examines worldwide
environmental concerns and gender and ethnic inequalities, and argues
that there is an urgent need to redefine "economic development" in order
to find solutions to crushing and dehumanizing poverty caused by current
economic policies around the globe."]
Fox,
Johnathan & L. David Brown (eds.). The Struggle For
Accountability: The World Bank, NGOs, And Grassroots Movements.
Cambridge: MIT Press.
George, Susan & Fabrizio
Sabelli. 1994. Faith And Credit: The
World Bank's Secular Empire.
Boulder: Westview.
Glasberg, Davita Silfen &
Kathryn B. Ward,. 1993. "Foreign Debt and
Economic Growth in the World
System," S ocial Science Quarterly,
v74n4 (Dec 1993): 703-720.
-
[Argues that the present phase of world-system
development is
shaped by finance capital and debt dependency. Although
debt might once
have stimulated economic growth, current levels of debt
service and
stocks on nonconcessional loans may hinder growth.]
Greenpeace. 1992. The World Bank's Greenwash: Touting
Environmentalism
While Trashing The Planet. Greenpeace
International, April 1992.
IRN. 1994. Damming The
Rivers: The World Bank's Lending For Large
Dams. International
Rivers Network. 1847 Berkeley Way, Berkeley CA,
94703.
Kofman, Eleonore & Gillian Youngs. 1996. Globalization:
Theory and
Practice. London: Pinter.
Melmed-Sanjak, Jolyne & Carlos E. Santiago & Alvin Magid (eds.)
1993.
Recovery or Relapse in the Global Economy: Comparative
Perspectives
on Restructuring in Central America. Westport, CT:
Praeger
Publishers.
-
["The culmination of
several years of intellectual exchange
between the State University of
New York at Albany and the University of
Costa Rica in San Jose. The
book offers diverse perspectives on economic,
political and social
development in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala,
and Nicaragua. It
also outlines how political-economic restructuring
ought to be planned
in the future, including such factors as agrarian
policy,
industrialization and foreign investment. Finally, it addresses
the
economic integration of Central America into the global
economy."]
Owen, Henry. 1994. "The World Bank: Is
50 Years Enough?" Foreign
Affairs, v73n5 (Sep 1994): 97-108.
-
[Argues that the Bank should not retire at the
age of 50.
Mission should be restructured to benefit from the growth of
private
sector financial resources and help coordinate the work of
nongovernmental organizations.]
Rich, Bruce. 1994.
Mortgaging The Earth: The World Bank, Environmental
Impoverishment,
And The Crisis Of Development. Boston: Beacon Press.
Rowbotham, Sheila & Swasti Mitter (eds.) 1994. Dignity and
Daily
Bread: New Forms of Economic Organizing Among Poor Women in the
Third
World and the First. New York: Routledge.
-
["Compares the lives of women in the First and Third Worlds, and
examines how women around the world have resisted and reorganized
existing forms of production to create alternative, more human
circumstances of work and daily life. Offering a wide range of stories -
from street vendors of India and garment workers of Mexico, to
homeworkers in Britain - the contributors work to break down the
ideological barriers that imperial colonialism and racism have built
among women."]
Shuman, Michael. 1994. Towards a
Global Village: International
Community Development Initiatives.
Boulder, CO: Pluto Press.
-
[Analyzes the
emerging global movement of community-based
development initiatives, or
CDIs--policies and actions undertaken jointly
by NGOs, community groups,
and local governments to promote global
development that reaches beyond
the borders of a local community.
Explores reasons behind development of
CDIs, different CDI methodologies
used to respond to diverse political,
economic and environmental issues,
and challenges the movement now
faces. Concludes with short summaries of
the CDI movement in 22
countries and a list of key contact people,
publications, and other
resources."]
Smith, William C. & Carlos H.
Acuna & Eduardo A. Gamarra. 1994.
Democracy, Markets, and
Structural Reform in Latin America:
Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile
and Mexico. New Brunswick, NJ:
Transaction Publishers.
-
["Highlights the connections between democratic politics
and
marketplace logic - a link reinforced by the "Washington Consensus"
of
freemarket reforms promoted by policy makers in the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and the U.S. government. Leading
U.S. and Latin American political scientists, economists, and
sociologists analyze the factors shaping democratization and economic
restructuring and assess alternative scenarios for politics and economics
in the region."]