A propensity to self-subversion /
"Albert O. Hirschman is renowned world-wide for theories that have been at the forefront of political economics during the last half century. In these twenty essays he casts his sharp analytical eye on his own ideas, questioning and qualifying some of his major propositions on social change and...
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Formato: | Libro |
Lenguaje: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge, Mass. :
Harvard University Press,
1995.
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Materias: | |
Aporte de: | Registro referencial: Solicitar el recurso aquí |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Introduction
- I. On Self-subversion: 1. Exit, Voice, and the Fate of the German Democratic Republic
- 2. The Rhetoric of Reaction : two years later
- 3. The Case against "One Thing at a Time"
- 4. Opinionated Opinions and Democracy
- 5. A Propensity to Self-Subversion
- II. On Self: 6. Four Reencounters
- 7. My Father and Weltanschauung, circa 1928
- 8. Studies in Paris, 1933-1935
- 9. Doubt and Antifascist Action in Italy, 1936-1938
- 10. With Varian Fry in Marseilles, 1940
- 11. Escaping over the Pyrences, 1940-41
- 12. A Hidden Ambition
- 13. Convergences with Michel Crozier
- III. New forays: 14. How the Keynesian Revolution Was Exported from the United States
- 15. On the Political Economy of Latin American Development
- 16. Is the End of the Cold War a Disaster for the Third World?
- 17. Industrialization and Its Manifold Discontents: West, East, and South
- 18. Does the Market Keep Us Out of Mischief or Out of Happiness?
- 19. The On-and-Off Connection between Political and Economic Progress
- 20. Social Conflicts as Pillars of Democratic Market Societies.