Populo Spring 2017

Peter Kingstone, “Economic Exclusion and the Sh ifting Patterns of Violence in Argentina and Brazil” in William Ascher and Natalia Mirovitskaya, ed., Economic Development Strategies and the Evolution of Violence in Latin America (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) R. Chilcote and J. C. Edelstein (eds.), Latin America: Struggle with Dependency and Beyond (London: Wiley, 1974) Rabah Arezki, Kaddour Hadri, Prakash Loungani, and Yao Rao “Tes ting the Prebisch-Singer hypothesis since 1650: evidence from panel techniques that allow for multiple breaks” International Monetary Fund 2013 Raúl Prebisch, “Anotaciones sobre nuestro medio circulante” Revista de Ciencias Económicas (Buenos Aires) 9, serie 2 (3) 1921, 93-175 Raúl Prebisch, “The Economic Development of Latin America and its Principal Problems” Economic Commission for Latin America (English translation: New York, 1950) Raúl Prebisch, Change and Development: Latin America’s Great Task (New York: Praeger, 1971) Robert Bideleux, “The Political Economy of Latin America, 1950s - 2010s: From ‘Structuralism’ (Alias ‘Developmentalism’ or ‘Populism’) To Neoliberal ‘Shock Therapy’ and ‘Structural Adjustment’ (The ‘Washington Consensus’) to ‘Neostructuralism’ (Alias ‘Neo - Developmentalism’ or ‘Neo - populism’)” Swansea University 2015, 5 Robert Gwynne and Cristóbal Kay (eds.), Latin America Transformed: Globalization and Modernity (London: Hodder Arnold, 1999) Thomas E. Skidmore, Peter H. Smith and James N. Green, Modern Latin Americ a, 7 th edition (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010) UN, “Relative Prices of Exports and Imports for Under -Developed Countries. A study of Post-War Terms of Trade between Under-Developed and Industrialized Countries” United Nations Department of Economic Affairs (New York) 1949

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