Edition DescriptionRevised edition
Table Of ContentPart I--Alternative Perspectives on East Asia: Ideology in Development Visions* A Marxist Perspective on the Neoliberal Versus Structural-Institutionalist Debate * Flying Geese and Greater China Approaches: The Limits of Regionalized "Modernization" * The Challenge and the Contradictions of Dependency Analysis * The Use and Abuse of Japan as a Progressive Model *Part II--Japanese Capitalism: Development, Crisis, Ideology* The Japanese Economy: Crisis and Ideology * Historical Roots of the "Japanese Model" * The Post-War Struggle to Reshape the Japanese Political Economy * The Renewal of the Japanese Model * The Japanese Miracle and its Contradictions * Dilemmas of Mature Japanese Capitalism *Part III--Contradictions of Capitalist Industrialization in East Asia* State-Capitalist Development, Crisis and Class Struggle in the NIEs * Imperialism, Exploitation, and Uneven Development in the SEA-3 *Part IV--East Asia and the Crisis of Development Theory* Mainstream Responses to the East Asian Crisis * Beyond TINA: Toward Worker-Community Centered Visions of Development Part I--Alternative Perspectives on East Asia: Ideology in Development Visions* A Marxist Perspective on the Neoliberal Versus Structural-Institutionalist Debate * Flying Geese and Greater China Approaches: The Limits of Regionalized "Modernization" * The Challenge and the Contradictions of Dependency Analysis * The Use and Abuse of Japan as a Progressive Model *Part II--Japanese Capitalism: Development, Crisis, Ideology* The Japanese Economy: Crisis and Ideology * Historical Roots of the "Japanese Model" * The Post-War Struggle to Reshape the Japanese Political Economy * The Renewal of the Japanese Model * The Japanese Miracle and its Contradictions * Dilemmas of Mature Japanese Capitalism *Part III--Contradictions of Capitalist Industrialization in East Asia* State-Capitalist Development, Crisis and Class Struggle in the NIEs * Imperialism, Exploitation, and Uneven Development in the SEA-3 *Part IV--East Asia and the Crisis of Development Theory* Mainstream Responses to the East Asian Crisis * Beyond TINA: Toward Worker-Community Centered Visions of Development
SynopsisEast Asia has long been the focus of development debates, first as a success story and now as a region in crisis. Nonetheless, there has been little if any serious discussion of what the region's experience tells us about capitalism and the prospects for non-capitalist development alternatives more centered on the needs of workers and communities. Development, Crisis and Class Struggle fills this gap., East Asia has long been the focus of development debates, first as a success story and now as a region in crisis. Nonetheless, there has been little if any serious discussion of what the region's experience tells us about capitalism and the prospects for non-capitalist development alternatives more centered on the needs of workers and communities.Development, Crisis and Class Strugglefills this gap.
LC Classification NumberHC460.5.B865 2000