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OIL POWER (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   124213


Going underground: the political economy of the 'left turn' in South America / Rosales, Antulio   Journal Article
Rosales, Antulio Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This article argues that South America's 'revolutionary' left turn can be best explained by its assertion of state property over natural resource extraction. The recent history of the leftist movements in Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador relates to the failures of the neoliberal reforms applied in the region decades before, hence the dismantling of core orthodox policies has been critical for them once in power. This has been possible through the expansion of state action in the economy, but mainly through the governance of hydrocarbon extraction and the control of subsoil rents. Resource extraction has been central to the political economy of Andean left-wing revolutionaries, responsible for many of their successes but also their impending challenges. This rearticulation of underground governance is linked to global transformations that give prominence to emerging economies and reinforces these countries' position in the world economy as providers of primary commodities.
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2
ID:   145539


Oil power and economic theologies: the United States and the third world in the wake of the energy crisis / Dietrich, Christopher R W   Journal Article
Dietrich, Christopher R W Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article holds that Henry Kissinger conducted a free market diplomacy in result to the 1974-1974 energy crisis. That is, he and other decision-makers in the Department of the Treasury, the National Security Council, and the State Department demonized the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries as an illiberal bogeyman and made the parallel argument that the free market was the only rational system capable of meeting global economic challenges. The culmination of this policy was the decision in the Ford Administration to subvert the egalitarian and redistributionist arguments of the United Nations’ 1974 Declaration of a New International Economic Order. Kissinger and other policymakers did so through a diplomacy of accommodation, a policy towards Third World demands for a more just international economy that continued into the Carter Administration.
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