One of the central claims of dependency theory - the nearly dominate framework adopted by the entire discipline of development studies since the 1960s - was that the yoke of imperial powers, especially the United States, weighed so heavily as to preclude the possibility of nations in the Third World becoming peer competitors on the global market. But what does the growing economic might of regional superpowers like Brazil mean for these views?
ForewordCarlos Eduardo MartinsList of Illustrations Introduction1 Dependency Theory in the Post-1945 Development Literature of Latin America2 Marini’s Marxism and Dependency Theory Today3 Neo-imperialism and Neo-dependency: Two Sides of the Same Historical-Political Process4 Sub-imperialism and Dependency5 The United States and Brazil: Antagonistic Cooperation6 Brasil Potência vs. Sub-imperialism7 Dictatorship, Democracy and the State of the Fourth Power8 Sub-imperialism and the Contemporary Capitalist CrisisEpilogue BibliographyIndex