The Cuban Revolution as Socialist Human Development
This re-reading of the Cuban Revolution from the perspective of socialist humanism engages unresolved issues in this political tradition and challenges the notion of human development popularized by the United Nations Development Programme (i.e., predicated on capitalism). UNDP economists and other agencies of international cooperation for development give a human face to a capitalist development process that is anything but humane. The authors argue that socialism in Cuba has taken a very different form (socialist human development) than it did elsewhere in the twentieth century, and that these unique characteristics enabled it to survive adverse conditions a 'near-perfect storm' that still threaten its evolution.
Series
Other books by Mark Rushton and Henry Veltmeyer
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Co-operativism and Local Development in Cuba
Edited by Sonja Novković and Henry Veltmeyer -
Power and Resistance
by James Petras and Henry Veltmeyer -
Extractive Imperialism in the Americas
by James Petras and Henry Veltmeyer -
Imperialism, Crisis and Class Struggle