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A very welcome addition to the largely scarce literature on the history of Middle Eastern-US relations in the area of economic development. ChoiceAlthough the United States' economic relations with the Third World have gone through various phases as political and fiscal conditions have shifted, Dr. Godfried contends that the main policy outlines established in the Middle East in the 1940s have dominated the American approach to Third World development ever since. His careful analysis of the issue traces the U.S. role in the North-South conflict over economic development and shows how U.S. development policy evolved during and after World War II, with particular reference to the Arab Middle East.
NATHAN GODFRIED has contributed articles on economic development, labor, and other Third World issues to journals of history and political economy.
Preface and Acknowledgments Prologue Economic Development As A Postwar Goal Reconstruction versus Development: 1946-1949 Reconstruction versus Development: Financial and Technical Aid America's Development Policy and the Arab East: 1942-1949 Arab East Development and the United States, 1942-1949: Case Studies Epilogue: The United States and Thirld World Development Appendix I Bibliography