Michael Stevenson
12 points -2 hours per week -First semester -Clayton
Objectives Students can expect to develop an understanding of the inequalities between the world's nations; an understanding of how the structure of global inequality effects different human groups in different ways; an increased awareness of the long-term historical, cultural, political, and economic forces which created and continue to create global inequalities; critical evaluative skills with regard to theoretical models which strive to explain unequal development; an enhanced cross-cultural knowledge about the dynamics of unequal development and its primary consequences; understanding of third world writers' views about these abovementioned issues.
Synopsis This subject takes as its central themes the social consequences of economic development. It therefore examines the question of the emergence of industrial capitalism and how through colonialism the twin seeds of capitalism and under-development were sown in the third world. It also examines the response of the third world to theses transformations.
Assessment Two essays (4500 words each): 100%
Recommended texts
Amin S Delinking: Towards a polycentric world Zed,
1990
Brewer A Marxist theories of imperialism RKP, 1991
Galeano E Memory of first Quartet, 1989
Hobsbawm E The age of revolution Mentor, 1962
Peet R Global capitalism: Theories of societal development RKP 1991
Rodney W How Europe underdeveloped Africa Howard U P, 1983
Saadawi N The hidden face of Eve Zed, 1980
Said E Orientalism Pantheon, 1976
Sen A Hunger and public action OUP, 1990
Shiva V Staying alive, women, ecology and development Zed, 1988
Williams E Capitalism and slavery Deutsch, 1981
Wilber C K The political economy of development and underdevelopment
1992