Ye Ye: The politics of the periphery were radicalizing. And i think at was what we were talking about with the structural approach to inflation, was that somsepalinos were being sort of radicalized but they were also radicalizing the debate. So one can imagine that all these things happening at the same time, like i spal biing, pulled in all these very different directions, and without not with clear resolution. But really, looking back in a sense, it was the politics of the peripheries which were,. understandably, given the conditions, radicalizing.And prebich who was more staying the same, probablyyaah, that is, that is also the case.
Historian Margarita Fajardo on her book The World That Latin America Created: The United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America in the Development Era. Fajardo discusses the Latin American economists at the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (CEPAL) who conceptualized the division of the global economy between center and periphery, and how that later gave rise to dependency theory and world systems theory. Plus Cuban Revolution and the Alliance for Progress, Allende's democratic road to socialism and right-wing coups in Chile and Brazil—and more.
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