
Free Markets and Food Riots
Description
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* Explores this general proposition in a cross-national study of the austerity protests, or the 'IMF Riots' that have affected so many debtor nations since the mid-1970s
* Argues that modern austerity protests, like the classical "bread riots" in eighteenth-century Europe are political acts aimed at injustice, but acts that are an integral part of the process of international economic and political restructuring
* Evaluates how modern food riots are most important for what they reveal about global economic transformation and its social, and political, consequences
* Provides a general framework (drawing on comparative and historical material) and then trace the cycle of uneven development, debt, neo-liberal reform, and protest in Latin America, Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe
* Focusses on the role of women in structural adjustment and protest politics and the features of seemingly anomalous cases which qualify the general argument
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Persons
David Seddon is Professor of Development Studies at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, and has written extensively on "the politics of structural adjustment".
Content
- Intro
- Free Markets & Food Riots: The Politics of Global Adjustment
- Contents
- List of Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Introduction
- 1 Global Adjustment
- 2 Food Riots Past and Present
- Part II Case Studies
- 3 Fighting for Survival: Women's Responses to Austerity Programs
- 4 Latin America: Popular Protest and the State
- 5 Economic Adjustment and Democratization in Africa
- 6 The Middle East and North Africa
- 7 The Asian Debt Crisis: Structural Adjustment and Popular Protest in India
- 8 Explaining Sri Lanka's Exceptionalism: Popular Responses to Welfarism and the "Open Economy"
- 9 The Politics of Economic Reform in Central and Eastern Europe
- Part III Conclusion
- 10 Debt Crisis and Democratic Transition
- Bibliography
- Index
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