Chapter 2.8 Notes: Structuralism and Imperialism
Structuralism
An IPE perspective that accounts for the political-economic interconnectedness (structural relationship) between any number of entities: the bourgeoisie and proletariat, the core and periphery, and the North and South
Dependency theory and the Modern World Systems theory are two key pillars of the classical liberal perspective.
False
From the modern world systems perspective, the international system is more dynamics and divided into a capitalist core, a semiperiphery, and a periphery. In Wallerstein's theory, the international division of labor and exploitation is static.
False
Lenin argued that capitalism was able to delay its crisis through national economic expansion.
False
Marx had a lot to say about international politics, t or f
False
Raul Prebisch, an Argentine economist and prominent dependency theorist, attempted to pin down exactly the mechanism in the international economic system that explained this structure of dependency. He noted that the terms of trade inherently worked in favor of periphery nations at the expense of the core.
False
The academic ______________ is the father of Modern World System's theory
Immanuel Wallerstein
What was a problem with terms of trade?
It benefited rich countries more than poor ones. Rich countries exchanged manufactured goods for raw materials, but those raw materials declined in value at a faster rate
Classes, as defined by Marx
People separated into groups based on ownership (or lack thereof) of capital
In structuralism and marxism, politics were controlled mostly by
People with the greatest capital
How does neo-imperialism differ from classical imperialism?
States no longer take over their conquered country
The Modern World System theory looks at capitalism as:
The interactions of core, semi-peripheral and peripheral
terms of trade
The rate at which units of one product can be exchanged for units of another product; the price of a good or service; the amount of one good or service that must be given up to obtain 1 unit of another good or service
According to dependency theory, why do LDCs remain underdeveloped?
Their dependence on industrialized nations prevents them from acquiring capital and technology for their own developments.
According to Andre Gunder Frank, Latin America's underdevelopment was not due to its supposed historical backwardness or presence of traditional societies but instead resulted from their exploitation by industrialized nations.
True
What Raul Prebisch meant by "terms of trade" was that the primary goods — commodities such as tea, sugar, coffee, tin, etc.—produced and exported by poor countries tended to decline in exchange value over time while the industrial goods produced by rich countries tended not to decline or declined at a much slower pace.
True
Dependency Theory
a model of economic and social development that explains global inequality in terms of the historical exploitation of poor nations by rich ones
Vladimir Lenin
argued that the exploitation of the lower-class as described by Marx was also occurring on an international scale in what he called Imperialism
For Marx, ___ forms everything
class conflict
Structuralism looks at how social and economic processes are shaped by
dominant structures
In Dependency Theory, benefits
don't trickle down
For Marx, the most dominant structure was
economy
Lenin believed that capitalism was able to postpone its crisis by:
exploiting less developed countries through imperialism
The dominant theoretical approach to development among Latin American intellectuals during the 1960s was ______________________ .
the Dependency Theory
The basic idea behind structuralism is that
the international system is one of explotation
Unlike dependency theory, world-systems theory
views development as possible for LCDs, even if it is dependent development