1.
Course information.
2.
Friedman G. The Global Crisis of Legitimacy. Stratfor Geopolitical Intelligence Report; 4 AD.
3.
Ziya Önis. The Logic of the Developmental State. Comparative Politics [Internet]. Ph.D. Program in Political Science of the City University of New York; 1991;24(1):109–126. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/view/422204
4.
Rodrik D. The Nation-State Reborn - Project Syndicate [Internet]. Available from: http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/the-nation-state-reborn
5.
M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation. Ethical dimensions of economic development. Ethics of economic development. Bangkok: UNESCO Regional Unit for Social & Human Sciences in Asia and the Pacific (RUSHSAP); 2003. p. 119–142.
6.
Lewis WA. Why Plan? The principles of economic planning. London: Dennis Dobson Ltd; George Allen and Unwin Ltd; 1949. p. 7–29.
7.
Friedman G. The Political Nature of the Economic Crisis. Stratfor; 2008.
8.
Allmendinger P. Marxism and critical theory. Planning theory. 2nd ed. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2009. p. 68–91.
9.
Bourgon J. Reclaiming Public Administration. Ethos [Internet]. 2008;(4). Available from: http://www.cscollege.gov.sg/Knowledge/Ethos/Issue%25204%2520Apr%25202008/Pages/Reclaiming-Public-Administration.aspx
10.
Turner MM, Hulme D. Development and its administration. Governance, administration and development: making the state work. Basingstoke: Palgrave; 1997. p. 1–21.
11.
Waterson A. The Many Meanings of Planning (Chapter 2). Development Planning Lessons of Experience [Internet]. World Bank; 1969. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/devplan69.htm
12.
Chenery HB, Carter NG. Internal and external aspects of development plans and performance, 1960-1970 (from the World Bank Archives - SWP141) [Internet]. 1973. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/wbdevplan73.pdf
13.
Background reading:
14.
Shafaeddin SM. "Who is the master? Who is the servant? Market or government?. An alternative approach: Towards a coordination system ", United Nation Conference on Trade and Development, Discussion paper No. 175 [Internet]. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/marketorgovernment.pdf
15.
Martinussen J. State or market? (Chapter 18). Society, state and market: a guide to competing theories of development. Atlantic Highlands, N.J: Fernwood Pub; 1997. p. 257–274.
16.
ul Haq M. ‘The Myth of the Friendly Markets’, edited transcript of an address given extempore at World Bank Twelfth Agriculture Sector Symposium (8 January). 1992.
17.
Kaplinsky R. ’Bottom of the Pyramid Innovation’ and Pro-Poor Growth, IKD Working Paper No. 62. Open University; 2011.
18.
Asian Development Bank. Market, state and civil society (Chapter 5). Sustainable Development in Asia. Mandaluyong City: Asian Development Bank; 1999. p. 153–167.
19.
Singh A. Global Economic Trends and Social Development: Geneva 2000 Occasional Paper No. 9. United Nations Research Institute for Social Development  (UNRISD);
20.
Rueschemeyer D, Evans PB. The State and Economic Transformations: Toward and Analysis of the Conditions Underlying Effective Intervention. Bringing the state back in. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1985. p. 44–77.
21.
Rojas R. Fifteen years of monetarism in Latin America. Time to scream [Internet]. 1997. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/scream.htm
22.
Rueschemeyer D, Evans PB. The State and Economic Transformations: Toward and Analysis of the Conditions Underlying Effective Intervention. Bringing the state back in. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1985. p. 44–77.
23.
Background reading:
24.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Macroeconomic policy under globalization (Chapter 4). TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT REPORT 2006: Global partnership and national policies for development. New York: United Nations; 2006. p. 127–148.
25.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Global Value Chains: investment and trade for development (Chapter 4). WORLD INVESTMENT REPORT 2013 Global Value Chains: Investment and trade for development [Internet]. New York: United Nations Publications; 2013. p. 122–202. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/wir2013ch4_en.pdf
26.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Non-equity modes of international production and development (Chapter 4). WORLD INVESTMENT REPORT 2011: Non-equity Modes of International Production and Development. New York: United Nations Publications; 2011. p. 124–174.
27.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Foreign Direct Investment, market structure and competition (Chapter 4). World Investment Report 1997: Transnational corporations, market structure and competition policy. New York: United Nations Publications; 1997. p. 133–182.
28.
Holton JR. The global economy. Globalization and the nation state. 2nd ed. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2011. p. 64–96.
29.
Holton JR. Is the Nation State Finished? Globalization and the nation state. 2nd ed. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2011. p. 97–126.
30.
Ortiz I, Cummins M. Global inequality: beyond the bottom billion. A Rapid Review of Income Distribution in 141 Countries [Internet]. New York: Unicef; 2011. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/globalinequality2011.pdf
31.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Patterns of Foreign Investments in the Triad (Chapter 2). WORLD INVESTMENT REPORT 1991: The Triad In Foreign Direct Investment. New York: United Nations Publications; 1991. p. 31–65.
32.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Overview. World Investment Report 1993: Transnational Corporations and Integrated International Production [Internet]. New York: United Nations; 1993. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/wir93toc.htm
33.
Memedovic O, Iapadre L. Structural Change in the World Economy: Main Features and Trends [Internet]. UNIDO; 2010. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/structchangeworldtoc.htm
34.
O’Byrne DJ, Hensby A. Globalization: the global village (Chapter 1). Theorizing global studies. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2011. p. 10–32.
35.
Vitali et al. S. The network of global corporate control [Internet]. Kreuzplatz 5, 8032 Zurich, Switzerland: Systems Design, ETH Zurich; 2011. p. 1–36. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/networkglobalcontrol.pdf
36.
Coghlan A, MacKenzie D. Revealed - the network that run the world. 24 AD;(2835). Available from: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21228354.500-revealed--the-capitalist-network-that-runs-the-world.html?mid=532#.Uk7QO3-E7mA
37.
Background reading:
38.
Prebisch R. Towards a theory of change. CEPAL Review. United Nations Publications; 2008;96:27–74.
39.
Koeller P, Gordon JL. Brazil (Chapter 2). In: Mario Scerri M, Lastres HMM, editors. BRICS National Systems of Innovation The Role of the State [Internet]. International Development Research Centre (IDRC); 2013. p. 23–75. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/theroletoc.htm
40.
Prebisch R. Five Stages in My Thinking On  Development. Pioneers in Development. 1984. p. 173–204.
41.
Rojas R. Notes on ECLA’s structuralism and dependency theory. 1992.
42.
Bielschowsky R. Sixty years of ECLAC: structuralism and neo- structuralism. CEPAL Review. United Nations Publications; 2009;97:171–192.
43.
Di Filippo A. Latin American structuralism and economic theory. CEPAL Review. United Nations Publications; 2009;98:175–196.
44.
Rodrik D. Globalization, Social Conflict and Economic Growth. United Nation Conference on Trade and Development; 1997.
45.
UNCTAD. Evolution in the terms of trade and its impact on developing countries. Trade and Development Report 2005: New Features of Global Interdependence [Internet]. UNCTAD; 2005. p. 101–108. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/tadr05toc.htm
46.
Draibe SM, Riesco M, editors. Latin America: A New Developmental Welfare State Model in the Making? [Internet]. UNRISD; 2004. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/da1/riescodevstate.pdf
47.
Gwynne, Robert N. New horizons?: Third World industrialization in an international framework. Harlow: Longman Scientific & Technical; 1990.
48.
Background reading:
49.
United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. State, political action, fiscal policy and social covenants: an equation in the making (Chapter 7). Time for equality: closing gaps, opening trails. 2010. p. 213–245.
50.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development XIII. Development-led Globalization: Towards sustainable and inclusive development paths: Report of the Secretary-General of UNCTAD to UNCTAD XIII. New York: United Nations; 2011.
51.
Cardoso FH, Faletto E. Capitalist development and the state: bases and alternatives (in Post Sciptum). Dependency and development in Latin America. Berkeley: University of California Press; 1979. p. 177–216.
52.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Towards a ‘developmental state’ (Chapter 3). Economic Development in Africa 2007: Reclaiming Policy Space Domestic Resource Mobilization and Developmental States. New York: United Nations; 2007. p. 57–88.
53.
J. Samuel Valenzuela and Arturo Valenzuela. Modernization and Dependency: Alternative Perspectives in the Study of Latin American Underdevelopment. Comparative Politics [Internet]. Ph.D. Program in Political Science of the City University of New York; 1978;10(4):535–557. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/421571
54.
Rojas R. A case of dependent capitalist development: Chile 1970. Notes [Internet]. 1992. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/foh3.htm
55.
Surin K. Dependency Theory’s reanimation in the era of financial capital. Cultural logic an electronic journal of Marxist theory and practice [Internet]. 1998;1(2). Available from: http://clogic.eserver.org/1-2/1-2index.html
56.
Sunkel O. The Transnational Corporate System. CTC Reporter [Internet]. New York: UN Centre on Transnational Corporations; 1985; Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/sunkeldp.htm
57.
ECLAC. Crisis, post-crisis, new era: between the limits of development and the development we intended (Chapter 1). Time for Equity: closing gaps, opening trails [Internet]. United Nations; 2010. p. 15–46. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/time2010toc.htm
58.
ECLAC. Macroeconomic policy for development: moving on from lessons learned and charting a new course (Chapter 2). Time for Equity: closing gaps, opening trails [Internet]. United Nations; 2010. p. 47–83. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/time2010toc.htm
59.
Background reading:
60.
Xiaohua D. ‘East Asian Model’: a few problems, but it works. Beijingn Review. 29 AD.
61.
Rojas R. Notes on South Korea, Taiwan and the myth of the ‘East Asian miracle’. 1996.
62.
Gill I, Kharas K. Overview. An East Asian renaissance: ideas for economic growth. Washington, D.C.: World Bank; 2007. p. 1–44.
63.
Gill I, Kharas K. Growth, Gravity, and Friction. An East Asian renaissance: ideas for economic growth. Washington, D.C.: World Bank; 2007. p. 45–79.
64.
Rojas R. Making sense of development studies (Notes). 1998.
65.
Berger MT. The triumph of the East? The East Asian miracle and post-Cold War capitalism. The rise of East Asia: Critical visions of the Pacific century. London: Routledge; 1997. p. 260–287.
66.
Beeson M. The rise and fall (?) of the developmental state: the vicissitudes and implications of East Asian interventionism [Internet]. 2004. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/dev2425.htm
67.
Fischer S. The Asian Crisis and the Changing Role of the IMF. Finance and Development [Internet]. 1998;35(2). Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/imf00.htm
68.
External Relations Department, International Monetary Fund. IMF Bail Outs: Truth and Fiction [Internet]. 1998. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/imf2.htm
69.
Background reading.
70.
Zang X. Why are the Elite in China Motivated to Promote Growth: UNU-WIDER Working Paper No. 2010/84. Helsinki, Finland: UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU-WIDER); 2010.
71.
Krishna VV. India (Chapter 4). In: Mario Scerri M, Lastres HMM, editors. BRICS National Systems of Innovation The Role of the State [Internet]. International Development Research Centre (IDRC); 2013. p. 138–187. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/theroletoc.htm
72.
Ping L. China (Chapter 5). In: Mario Scerri M, Lastres HMM, editors. BRICS National Systems of Innovation The Role of the State [Internet]. International Development Research Centre (IDRC); 2013. p. 188–247. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/theroletoc.htm
73.
Banerjee P, Sood A. The Political Economy of Green Growth in India. United Nations Research Institute for Social Development; 2012.
74.
Mahtaney P. India, China and globalization: the emerging superpowers and the future of economic development. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2007.
75.
Rojas R. Notes on China’s painful path to capitalism. 1997.
76.
Rojas R. The other side of China’s economic miracle: unemployment and inequality. 1997.
77.
Broadman HG. Overview. Africa’s silk road: China and India’s new economic frontier. Washington, DC: World Bank; 2006. p. 1–38.
78.
Broadman HG. Chapter 1 : Connecting two continents. Africa’s silk road: China and India’s new economic frontier. Washington, DC: World Bank; 2006. p. 39–56.
79.
Yabuki, Susumu, Harner, Stephen M. China’s new political economy. Rev. ed. Boulder, Colo: Westview; 1999.
80.
Breslin S. China and the global political economy. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2007.
81.
Dhongde S. Decomposing Spatial Differences in Poverty in India [Internet]. UNU WIDER; 2004. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/unurp04/rp2004-053_1.pdf
82.
Palmer-Jones R, Sen K. What Has Luck Got To Do With It?  A Regional Analysis of Poverty and Agricultural Growth in Rural India. Journal of development studies [Internet]. 2003;40(1):1–31. Available from: http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=ip,shib&db=bth&AN=11716842&site=ehost-live&scope=site
83.
Background reading.
84.
Hanlon J, Mosse M. Mozambique’s Elite – Finding its Way in a Globalized World and Returning to Old Development Models: UNU-WIDER Working Paper No. 2010/105. Helsinki, Finland: UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU-WIDER); 2010.
85.
Carmignani F, Chowdhury A. The development effects of natural resources: a geographical dimension: William Davidson Institute Working Paper Number 1022. Michigan: William Davidson Institute; 2011.
86.
Scerri M. South Africa (Chapter 6). In: Scerri M, Lastres HMM, editors. BRICS National Systems of Innovation The Role of the State [Internet]. International Development Research Centre (IDRC); 2013. p. 248–307. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/theroletoc.htm
87.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Changes in the Terms of Development Partnership. The transformation of the PRSPs. The least developed countries report 2008 Growth, Poverty and the Terms of Development Partnership. New York: United Nations; 2008. p. 97–134.
88.
Helleiner GK. Markets, Politics and Globalization: Can the Global Economy be Civilized?: 10th Raúl Prebisch Lecture. United Nations Conference on Trade and Development; 2000.
89.
Okolo A. Dependency in Africa: stages of African Political Economy. Alternatives. 1983.
90.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Economic Development in Africa: Performance, Prospects an Policy Issues. New York: United Nations; 2001.
91.
Bello W. Destroying African Agriculture. Foreign Policy In Focus; 2008.
92.
Amin, Samir. Maldevelopment anatomy of a global failure. Japan: United Nations University Press, Zed Books Ltd; 1990.
93.
Gire JT. A Psychological Analysis of Corruption in Nigeria. Journal of Sustainable Development in Africa. Clarion, Pennsylvania: Clarion University of Pennsylvania; 1999.
94.
Rojas R. Notes on the centrality of the African State. 1997.
95.
Rojas R. Notes on the European Union and Africa. 1997.
96.
Rojas R. Africa: transformation without change. 1996.
97.
Mkandawire T. Thinking about developmental states in Africa. Cambridge Journal of Economics. 2001;25(3):289–314.
98.
United Nations Conference on Trade abd Development. A strategic framework for sustainable structural transformation (Chapter 3). Economic Development in Africa Report 2012: Structural Transformation and sustainable development in Africa. New York: United Nations; 2012. p. 66–93.
99.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. The Role of the State in Economic Transformation in Africa (Chapter 4). Economic Report for Africa 2011: Governing development in Africa The role of the state in economic transformation. New York: United Nations; 2011. p. 75–93.
100.
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Africa’s Need for a Developmental State: Opportunities and Challenges (Chapter 5). Economic Report for Africa 201: Governing development in Africa The role of the state in economic transformation. New York: United Nations; 2011. p. 95–114.
101.
The Economist. Buying farmland abroad: Outsourcing’s third wave. The Economist. London: The Economist Newspaper Limited; 2009;
102.
Cuffaro N, Hallam D. Land Grabbing” in Developing countries: Foreign Investors, Regulation and Codes of Conduct. Dipartimento di Scienze Economiche, University of Cassino; 2011.
103.
Zoomers A. Introduction: Rushing for Land: Equitable and sustainable development in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Development. 2011;54(1):12–20.
104.
Vidal J, Provost C. US universities in Africa ‘land grab’. The Guardian; 8 AD; Available from: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/jun/08/us-universities-africa-land-grab
105.
Harding C. Land for a bottle of whisky? Rethinking land grab in Africa. 13 AD; Available from: http://www.howwemadeitinafrica.com/land-for-a-bottle-of-whisky-rethinking-land-grab-in-africa/10441/
106.
Mkandawire T. The Need to Rethink Development Economics. Draft paper prepared for the discussion at the UNRISD meeting on ‘The Need to Rethink Development Economics’, 7-8 September 2001, Cape Town, South Africa [Internet]. Geneva, Switzerland: United Nations Research Institute for Social Development; 2001. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/mkandawi0.pdf
107.
United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. Governing Development in Africa: Needs and Responses (Chapter 6). Economic Report on Africa 2011: Governing development in Africa The role of the state in economic transformation [Internet]. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: United Nations Economic Commission for Africa; 2011. p. 115–131. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/era2011toc.htm
108.
UNCTAD. Towards a ‘Developmental State’ (Chapter 3). Economic Development in Africa 2007: Reclaiming Policy Space Domestic Resource Mobilization and Developmental States [Internet]. Geneva, Switzerland: Unuted Nations; 2007. p. 57–88. Available from: http://www.rrojasdatabank.info/eda2007.htm
109.
Background reading.