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Agrarian History of the Cuban Revolution: Dilemmas of Peripheral Socialism: Studies in Critical Social Sciences / New Scholarship in Political Economy, cartea 249/23

Autor Joana Salém Vasconcelos Traducere de Bhuvi Libiano
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 mar 2023
In Agrarian History of the Cuban Revolution, the Brazilian historian Joana Salém Vasconcelos presents in clear language the complicated challenge of overcoming the condition of Latin America’s underdevelopment through a revolutionary process. Based on diverse historical sources, she demonstrates why the sugar plantation economic structure in Cuba was not entirely changed by the 1959 Revolution.

The author narrates in detail the three dimensions of Cuban agrarian transformation during the decisive 1960s — the land tenure system, the crop regime, and the labour regime —, and its social and political actors. She explains the paths and detours of Cuban agrarian policies, contextualized in a labour-intensive economy that needs desperately to increase productivity and, at the same time, promised widely to emancipate workers from labour exploitation. Cuban agrarian and economic contradictions are well-synthetized with the concept of Peripheral Socialism.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004538290
ISBN-10: 9004538291
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Critical Social Sciences / New Scholarship in Political Economy


Notă biografică

Joana Salém Vasconcelos, has a Ph.D. on Economic History at University of São Paulo and a Master’s Degree on Economic Development at State University of Campinas. She is coordinating editor of Latin American Perspectives (US) and associated researcher of Centro de Estudios de Historia Agraria en América Latina (CEHAL).

Cuprins

Acknowledgments

Foreword—English Edition Cuba’s Present and a Specter Haunting the Spectators

Foreword—Brazilian Edition

List of Tables, Charts, and Maps

Cuban Provinces from 1940 to 1976

Introduction Dilemmas of Peripheral Socialism

1Modernization of Cuban Plantation (1902–1958)
1 Latifundium-Minifundium Land Tenure Structure
1.1Between Latifundium and Minifundium 

1.2Origins of Structural Heterogeneity

1.3Social Actors of Modern Plantation


2 Cropping Regimes: Sugarcane Fields in Wall Street
2.1Military Order No.62 and Primitive Accumulation

2.2Dance of the Millions

2.3Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act of 1934 and the Jones-Costigan Amendment

2.4Ascension of Cuban Saccharocracy


3 Labor Regime: the Curse of the Crowds
3.1Statistics Cover-Up

3.2A Portrait of Rural Misery

3.3 Structural Unemployment and tiempo muerto


4 The World Seen from Above
4.1Batista and the Rockefeller-Sullivan  

4.2A Portrait of Saccharocracy


5 Revolution against Underdevelopment
5.1The Moncada Program

5.2Revolutionary Democratic Nationalism

5.3Sierra Maestra Law No.3


2First Agrarian Reform, Impulses and Impasses (1958–1963)
1 Transformation of the Land Tenure System
1.1The Agrarian Reform Law of 1959

1.2Nationalization Laws

1.3A Portrait of Structural Transformation


2 Cooperatives or State Farms?
2.1The Proletarian Peasant and the Scale Preservation

2.2Agricultural Cooperatives

2.3Granjas del Pueblo (People’s Farm)

2.4Converting Cooperatives into Granjas


3 Peasantry: Principle of Voluntarism and anap
3.1anap Foundation and Its Principles

3.2Mistakes Made with the Peasantry

3.3anap’s “Administrativism”

3.4Politics of Voluntary Collectivism


4 Agricultural Diversification: Disruption of the Double Articulation
4.1Neocolonial Insertion Crisis: the Search for National Sovereignty

4.2Increase of Internal Demand: Searching for Social Equity

4.3Diversification: Searching for Economic Development

4.4Structural Problems of Diversification: Extensive, Disorganized, and Inefficient

4.5Intensification of Class Struggle and General Economic Trends in 1963


3Second Agrarian Reform and the Sugar Paradox (1963–1967)
1 Transformation of the Land Tenure System
1.1The Agrarian Reform Law of October 1963

1.2Cyclone Flora

1.3The Social Structure of the New Agriculture

1.4A Combined Strategy: Sugar, Diversification and Technology


2 The Soviet Union and the Sugar Paradox
2.1The 1964 Agreement

2.2Back to Sugar

2.3Inserted Revolution and the Paradox of the New Dependency

2.4Third World: Arena for National Sovereignty 


3 Agrarian Management: between Relative Autonomy and Centralization
3.1Agrupamientos, Departamentos, Lotes (Grouping, Departments, Allotments)

3.2Aspects of the Great Debate in Agriculture


4 Specialized Diversification and Technology-Intensive Model
4.1Crop Performance between 1964 and 1970

4.2Combinados and Special Plans: Modes of Diversification

4.3Peasantry and Special Plans


5 Technological Dependency and Sugarcane Mechanization
5.1Investment and Consumption

5.2Tiempo Muerto in Reverse: Unemployment in Disguise

5.3Paths and Detours of Technological Choice


4The 1970 Harvest and Development Strategy (1967–1970)
1 Agrarian Structure and Development Strategy
1.1Import Substituting Industrialization

1.2Turnpike Strategy: the Return of “Comparative Advantages”?

1.3Why Ten Million?


2 Revolutionary Offensive and Moral Economy
2.1Moral Economy and Ideological Centralization

2.2Collective Wage Agreement and Lack of Accounting Control

2.3The Shrinking of the Peasantry


3 The 1970 Harvest: Plan and Reality
3.1Simultaneous Battles

3.2The Harvest in Numbers

3.3Causes of Failure

3.4Structural Distortions


4 Voluntary Work: between Consciousness and Coercion
4.1Drop in Productivity and Elimination of the Foreman

4.2Criticism of Volunteer Labor

4.3The Militarization of Labor

4.4Self-Criticism


5Conclusion Dilemmas of Peripheral Socialism
1 Geopolitical Implications: the Source of Surplus
1.1The Transfer of Soviet Resource

1.2Multilateral Payment Agreement

1.3Cold War and Geopolitical Advantages

1.4Joining the comecon


2 Peripheral Socialism and Rationality of the Possible
2.1From Segregation to Egalitarianism

2.2Development of the Productive Forces

2.3Peripheral Socialism and Rationality of the Possible


Bibliography

Index