State Resistance to Globalisation in Cuba

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2004-03-20
Publisher(s): UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS
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Summary

In a world dominated by neo-liberal globalisation, Cuba stands apart as a tiny enclave of resistance to the free market economy. Its success -- in the face of massive opposition from the US and the apparent triumph of neoliberalism worldwide -- is remarkable. This book offers a comprehensive analysis of the ways in which the government and the people of Cuba have actively resisted neo-liberal globalisation. The author challenges those on the Left who romantically support the Cuban Revolution as well as those who claim that the free market is the ideal economic model for all states. Instead, he presents an intelligent account of the serious and contradictory consequences of Cuba's social, political and economic restructuring. How is it that the Cuban Communist Party continues to exist? To what extent is Cuba affected by global trends and pressures? The author revisits the history of the Cuban Revolution, and the crisis after the fall of Cuba's superpower ally, the Soviet Union, to provide answers to these questions. {Baez} is distinct in offering Cuba as a case that offers the potential for a general critique of globalization and contemporary arguments on how to politically resist it" Dr Richard Saull. Dept of International Relations, Leicester University

Author Biography

Antonio Carmona Baez is a young Puerto Rican scholar and activist.
Currently based in the Netherlands, he works at the TNI (TransNational Institute) along with such opponents of globalisation as Susan George and Walden Bello.
His forthcoming book on the condition of labour in Cuba will be published later this year by Routledge.

Table of Contents

Preface vii
1. Introduction 1(40)
Cuba as an Exception
2(3)
Neo-liberal Globalisation, Socialism and Anti-Imperialist State Resistance
5(8)
Implications for the State
13(1)
Social Consequences of the Global Trends
14(2)
Socialism in a Sea of Capitalism
16(1)
Marxist Socialism
17(4)
State Capitalism
21(3)
Implications for Studying Cuba
24(10)
The Party/State Apparatus
34(7)
2. Conceptualising Cuban Socialism: The Pillars of the Revolution 41(45)
The Causes of a Tardy Independence
42(1)
Roots of Nation-state Formation
43(5)
US Intervention and Neo-colonialism
48(2)
The First Labour Movement
50(2)
A Workers' Revolutionary Attempt
52(8)
An Alternative to the Workers' Movement
60(9)
'Cuba Socialista'
69(10)
Economic Integration into the Soviet Bloc
79(2)
Unity, Continuity, State Supremacy and Popular Participation
81(5)
3. The Causes and Impact of Cuba's Crisis in the 1990's 86(66)
The Background to the Crisis
89(1)
The Effects of Integration
90(2)
The Campaign to Rectify Errors and Negative Tendencies
92(2)
The Demise of the CMEA
94(3)
Cuba and the Fall of the Soviet Union
97(12)
The US Economic Embargo
109(8)
The State's Response and the Impact upon Cuba's Political System
117(16)
Foreign Direct Investment
133(6)
Signs of Slow Recovery
139(13)
4. Structural Adjustments and Social Forces in Cuba: How Cuba's Economic Model was Shaped by Global Trends 152(71)
Demonstrated Economic Growth
153(2)
Causes for Economic Growth
155(3)
Social Growth
158(4)
World Bank Development Reports and Other International Sources
162(2)
Cuba's Most Radical Change - Sistema de Perfeccionamiento Empresarial
164(20)
Cuentapropismo: The New Self-employment in Cuba
184(11)
New Structures
195(11)
New Structures and Social Bloc Formations
206(10)
Structural Changes and the Revolution's Identity
216(7)
5. Conclusions and Considerations 223(17)
Shaky Pillars?
226(5)
Possible Future Scenarios
231(2)
A Disintegration of the Party/State Apparatus?
233(2)
Maintaining Cuban Socialism
235(5)
Bibliography 240(17)
Index 257

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