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Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

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Back Matter Source: Latin American Perspectives, Vol. 23, No. 3, Postbonanza Venezuela (Summer, 1996) Published by: Sage Publications, Inc. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2634113 . Accessed: 14/06/2014 21:18 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Sage Publications, Inc. is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Latin American Perspectives. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 185.44.77.34 on Sat, 14 Jun 2014 21:18:35 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Page 1: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

Back MatterSource: Latin American Perspectives, Vol. 23, No. 3, Postbonanza Venezuela (Summer, 1996)Published by: Sage Publications, Inc.Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2634113 .

Accessed: 14/06/2014 21:18

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Sage Publications, Inc. is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Latin AmericanPerspectives.

http://www.jstor.org

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Page 2: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

PROGRAM IN AGRARIAN STUDIES YALE UNIVERSITY

The Program in Agrarian Studies at Yale is an experimental, interdisciplinary effort to reshape how a new generation of scholars understands rural life and society. The many hands from many disciplines that have shaped this Program share three premises. The first is that any satisfactory analysis of agrarian development must begin with the lived experience, understandings, and values of its historical subjects. The second premise is that the study of the Third World (and what was, until recently, called the Second World) must never be segregated from the historical study of the West, or the humanities from the social sciences. Finally, we are convinced that the only way to loosen the nearly hegemonic grip of the separate disciplines on how questions are framed and answered is to concentrate on themes of signal importance to several disciplines. By building a sustained community of interdisciplinary conversation and by demonstrating what creative trespassing can accomplish, we hope to set a standard of integrative work that will act as a magnet. The Program began with academic year 1991-92 thanks to support from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Ford Foundation, and Yale University.

COLLOQUIUM SERIES The core of the Program's activities is a weekly collo- quium organized around an annual theme. Invited specialists send papers in advance which are the focus of an organized discussion by faculty and graduate students. 'Hinterlands, Frontiers, Cities, and States: Transactions and Iden- tities' is our theme for the next two years. This topic would embrace, inter alia, the study of mutual perceptions between countryside and city, and patterns of cultural and material exchange, extraction, migration, credit, legal systems, and political order that link them. It would also include an understanding of how different societies conceive of the spatial order they exhibit. What terms are meaningful and how are they related, e.g. frontier, wildemess, arable, country- side, city, town, agriculture, commerce, 'hills,' lowlands, maritime districts, inland? How have these meanings changed historically and what symbolic and material weight do they bear? We hope the colloquium will become an impor- tant audience for the best work on this subject from any historical period, region, or discipline.

PROGRAM FELLOWS The program appoints Research Fellows annually who are in residence for the year, present a paper, and attend the colloquia. Ordinarily, we hope to have four to six Fellows whose diversity reflects the breadth of the program and a Senior Fellow who has already made an important contribution to agrarian studies. Fellows are selected competitively. For information about application procedures and deadlines, write directly to the Program in Agrarian Studies, Box 208300, New Haven, CT 06520-8300, USA.

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Page 3: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

A NACLA READER i FREE TRAD)E

AND ECONOMIC

RKESTRUCTUBING IN

LATIN\ AMERICA EDITED BlY FRED ROSEN & DEIDRE EMcFADYEN

Foreword by Ruben Zamora "NYACLA Report on the Americas is

always right on the mark. If you need to know about Latin America, it is a must."

-U.S. Representative Ron Dellums

This collection of essays from NACLA Report on the Americas investigates the justifications, consequences, and broad historical context of the neoliberal agenda in Latin America: privatization, cuts in social spending, and deregulation, accompanied by market-driven, outward-oriented economic development. It explains why such policies appeared necessary to policymakers in the 1980s, and how restructuring came to form a part of the neoliberal prescription.

$16.00 PB9533 paper/288 pp. ($3.00 P & H)

Mourmx Rvnw PlRESS 122 West 27th Street * New York, NY 10001 * T: (212) 691 -2555

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Page 4: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

? IN LATIN AMEDICA :4.t- >'A ,$ X , s . o o4 _ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:- e a - . . > > .

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Page 5: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

Recent articles: An interdisciplinary Growth with Pollution: Unsustainable Devel- journal exploring opment in Taiwan and its Consequences Chun-Chieh Chi current issues in The Political Economy of Development: development theory An Empirical Analysis of the Effects of the Institutional Framework on and practice. Open to Economic Development John Mukum Mbaku all theoretical, Modelling Peruvian Debt Rescheduling in the 1980s methodological, and Vinod K. Aggarwai and Maxwell A. Cameron ideological approaches Bonanza and Dependency in Botswana in examining the Thomas Meisenhelder

relationship between

population, technology,

John D. Martz and policy in a EDITOR Pennsylvania State University developmental context.

Published Quarterly Subscription rates: Individuals: $62/yr; $1 14/2yrs; $1 56/3yrs Institutions: $124/yr; $228/2yrs; $312/3yrs transaction Domestic first-class mail add $32/yr TRANSACTION PUBLISHERS Foreign surface mail add $32/yr DEPARTMENT 2095 Foreign airmail add $48/yr RUTGERS-THE STATE UNIVERSITY

(Rates subject to change annually) NEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY 08903

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Page 6: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

ANTI PODE A RADICALJOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY

Edited by RICHARD WALKER LINDA MCDOWELL

University of Califomia, Berkeley University of Cambridge, UK

Now in its 28th year, Antipode continues as the leading voice of the Left in geography. Antipode publishes articles, essays and book reviews on the radical analysis of spatial and environmental problems, providing a forum for intellectually stimulating yet forthright discussion on topics of vital social and political concern.

Recent articles and debates have covered such topics as: collective consumption and urban segregation in South Africa, U.S. foreign policy and spatiality in the Gulf Crisis, post structuralism and feminist analysis, urban poverty, and multiculturalism and racism.

The spirit and purpose of Antipode remains as important today as it did 28 years ago. Editors Richard Walker and Linda McDowell preserve that legacy with their assertion that Antipode shall "promote social change through politically committed scholarship and the nurturence of critical thought and dissenting voices."

ISSN 0066-4812, Published Quarterly Subscription rates forAntipode, Volume 28, 1996: Institutional: ............. $130.00 (N. America) .... $162.00 (Rest of World)

Individual: ............. $42.00 (N. America) ..... $50.00 (Rest of World)

'Low income individuals: ..... $25.00 (N. America) ..... $30.00 (Rest of World)

'Members of AAG or IBG ..... $36.50 (N. America) ..... $43.00 (Restof World) *Proof of occupation, affiliation and/or membership required

Journals Department Blackwell Publishers, 238 Main Street Cambridge, MA 02142 E-Mail:[email protected] B3LAC I(\ E L L CALL TOLL-FREE (800) 835-6770

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Page 7: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

Capitalism Nature

) Socialism A Journal of Socialist Ecology Edited by James O'Connor University of California, Santa Cruz

CNS is the only serious red-green theoretical journal in the world. It is edited by a distinguished group of scholars and scholar activists, half of whom are North American, the other half from a variety of countries. CNS seeks to meld the traditional concerns of labor move- ments with the ecological struggles in particular, and demands of the new social movements in general. To this end, it publishes articles, reviews, interviews, documents, and poems that locate themselves at the site between history and nature, or society and the environment. The result is a publication that explores su"ch topics as historical ecol- ogy, Marxism and ecology, sustainable development, philosophy of nature, political economy of ecology, socialist eco-feminism, environ- mentalism and the state, and ecological racism.

ARTICLES INCLUDE: Merchandising Biodiversity, Joan Martnez-Alier * Jakob Boehm: A Gate into the Green World, Paul Buhle * Land, Nature and Human Community: Wes Jackson's Vision of the Domestic Prairie, Donald 0. Richards * "Nature" as Aesthetic Norm, Arthur Lovejoy

Sample copies available! (samples@guilfordxcom)

SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION ICSSN 1045A5752 o lume _7X 199 n4 {As'__es)

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Page 8: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

LEFT CURVE no.20 Responding to Millenial Endgames...

Digital Spectacles... The Digital Advantage by Jim Davis and Michael Stack; The June Stits Arcane (poem) by Jack Hirschman; Imagoclasms; or, the Cultural Politics of Digitisation bv Gerard Groggin; Ornament by Michael Filas; Jump-Cut History by this Prune- Picker's Blues (poem) by W. K. Buckley; MSDOS (poem) by Sandra Monday. Post-communist Culture... "there's WAR today!" The Balkan tragedy in the work of artists from the former Yugoslavia by Baiint Szombathy; After Auschwitz, After Sarajevo..., War Poetry from Bosnia (Goran Simic, Izet Sarajlic, Miljenko Jergovic) introduced by Balint Szombathy; Diamonds Out of Ashes, Interview with Gyorgy Szomjas, Hungarian Filnmmaker by Csaba Polony; Two Tales of Before and After: 1. Survival 1990; How to Emerge from Totalitarianism with vour Faculties Intact, 2.Signs by Pdter Lengyel. Ethnic (Post-colonial) Identities... Categories of Identity and the Transfixed Face of Art by Elizam Escobar; Elizam Escobar's "Transflxions" or the Loss of Utopia by Carlos Gil; Something Remains Between the Fingers by John Berger; Haiti and Democratic Transitions by Franck Laraque, (with poetry from Haiti by TontonGuy, George Castera, Denize Lautre, Patrick Sylvain, Koralen [Jean-Claude Martineau]); Race definitions (poem) by Devorah Maj'or; Brown-faced Anger with the Trees that Bend and Sway (poem) by Charles Curtis Blackwell; Postcolonial Theory and Philippine Reality: The Challange of a Third World Culture to Global Capitalism by E.San Juan, Jr.

Cornnodified Love... Lost Loves and Shattered Dreams An unusual investigation into the American Way by M. Polderman and 1. A. M. H. van Krogten ; COOL LOVE (poem) by W.K. Buckley; Life Savings (poem) by Keri Brostrom & Something Better Than War (poemn) bv Denise A. Collins; Whistling With Love by Sdamas Carraher.

& Etc.... Work and Its Malcontents by Ben Satterfield; Waiting for Revisionism

(review ol Illuminating Video) by Richard K(stelanet>; The River (poem) by John Smelcer; Bob Snyder, 1937-1995, tnrbute by Peter Laska, The Night Watch (poeni) by Bob Snyder; Second Reckoning (poem) by Peter Laska; Illustrated History, No.11 by Maniona Barkus; Terra Firma in the 36th Year by Rosemary Manno; Profane Theses, for the self-determination of subjects by Michele Licheri.

$1 0/copy Po Box 472 Subs: $25 (3 issues) 136 pp. Oakland, CA 9464 $35 (Institutions)

e-mail: [email protected]

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Page 9: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

A QUARTERLY OF RADICAL THIRD WORLD STUDIES (In German language)

Important Themes so far:

* Women: Power, Work, Organisation (Nos 13, 30/31) * International Economic Crisis (No.15/1 6) * Peasants, Development, Agribusiness (Nos.17,28) * Cultural Identity and Nation (No.18/19) * The First Gulf War (Nos.18/19,29) * Minorities (No.20) * Transnational Corporations (No.21) * Fordism and Development (No.22/23) * Racism (No.24) * Development Cooperation? (No.25/26) * Uneven Development (No.32) * IMF, World Bank vs. Sovereignty (No.33/34) * Work, Daily Life, Festivities (No.35) * Population Politics (No.36) * Images of Humankind (No.37) * Technology (No.38) * The 1 980s: A Balance (No.39/40) * Beyond East-West Confrontation (No.41) * The Second Gulf War (No.42) * 500 Years West European Expansion (No.43/44) * Africa (No.45) * Production-Relations/Structural Change (No.46) * Gender relations (No.47/48) * Migration (No.49) * Modernisation without Alternatives (No.50) * Politics of Environment (No.51/52) * Research Methods in Discussion (No.53) * Ecology and Economy (No.54) * UN-intervention (No.55/56) * Research Methods and Gender (No.57/58) * Globalisation (No.59/60) * Human Rights (No..61) * Small Scale Production (No.62)

In every issue: Book Reviews, Books Received, English Summaries of the main articles.

For Subscriptions and full details write to: LN-Vertrieb Subscriptions Im Mehringhof, Gneisenaustr. 2, D-10961 Berlin (one year) Individuals Institutions Editorial Address: Normal DM 45 DM 80 c/o Heide Mertens, Kleine Gasse 4, D-59495 Soest Airmail DM 65 DM 100

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Page 10: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

PARTICIPATING EDITORS

Maria Helena Moreira Alves, Los Andes, Ruy Mauro Marini, UNAM, Mexico City Chile Edwin Melendez, University of

Thomas Angotti, Brooklyn, New York Massachusetts, Boston Ricardo Antunes, UNICAMP, Brazil Jos6 Alvaro Moises, USP, Brazil Florence Babb, University of Iowa Pedro Monreal, CEA, Havana David Barkin, UNAM, Mexico City Ronaldo Munck, University of Roger Bartra, UNAM, Mexico City Durban-Westville, South Africa Emelio Betances, Gettysburg College Steve Niblo, La Trobe University, Australia Armando Boito, UNICAMP, Brazil Jos6 Nun, University of Toronto Barry Carr, La Trobe University, Australia James O'Connor, University of California, Julio Carranza Vald6s, CEA, Havana Santa Cruz Alberto Ciria, Simon Fraser University James Petras, State University of New York, James Cockcroft, Chestertown, New York Binghamton James Cypher, California State University, Julio C6sar Pino, Kent State University

Fresno Angel Quintero Rivera, CEREP, San Juan Carmen Diana Deere, University of Emir Sader, USP, Brazil

Massachusetts, Amherst Boaventura de Sousa Santos, Universidade H6ctor Diaz-Polanco, CIESAS, Mexico City de Coimbra Haraldo Dilla, CEA, Havana Hobart A. Spalding, Jr., Brooklyn College oJ Elizabeth Dore, University of Portsmouth CUNY Alex Dupuy, Wesleyan University Steve J. Stem, University of Wisconsin, Enrique Dussel, UNAM, Mexico City Madison Susan Eckstein, Boston University Geraldo Timossi, CRIES, Managua Joel C. Edelstein, University of Colorado, Edelberto Torres-Rivas, Confederacion

Denver Superior Centroamericana, San Jose' Daniel Faber, Northeastern University, Tomas A. Vasconi, Santiago, Chile

Boston Mary K. Vaughan, University of Illinois, Frank T. Fitzgerald, College of St. Rose Chicago Marco A. GandAsegui, CELA, Panama Carlos Vilas, UNAM, Mexico City Martha E. Gim6nez, University of Colorado Steve Volk, Oberlin College, Ohio Daniel Hellinger, Webster University Hilboume Watson, Howard University, Susanne Jonas, University of California, Washington, DC

Santa Cruz Frederick S. Weaver, Hampshire College, James Levy, University of New South Wales Amherst Michael Lowy, Paris Cliff Welch, Grand Valley State University Florencia E. Mallon, University of Andrew Zimbalist, Smith College,

Wisconsin, Madison Northampton

For SAGE PERIODICALS PRESS: Barbara Metzger, Catherine M. Chilton, and Rose Tylak

($) SAGE PUBLICATIONS Thousand Oaks London New Delhi

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Page 11: Postbonanza Venezuela || Back Matter

Free Trade in the Western Hemisphere Edited by Sidney Weintraub, Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin

In 1990, former President George Bush suggested free trade from "Alaska to Tieli-a del Fuego," stiiTing up intense support among Latin American and Caribbean countries. But in the U.S., a long and sometimes bitter period of debate preceded the ratification of the North American Free Trade Agreement. And still many of the initial concerns remain unresolved. For instance, will the countries involved be willing and able to make the necessary internal adjustments to sustain the agreement?

This Special Issue of The ANNALS examines the many e) = aspects of this vital economic issue. Experts analyze the

* ~ W) lingering subthemes such as the compatibility of hemispheric regionalism and international multilateralism, and the possible effects of free trade on Western

g (;Q Hemispheric countries and institutions. Selected articles include:

? Western Hemisphere Free Trade: Probability or Pipe Dream 0 A New Latin American and Caribbean Nationalism

Q * _ Profiles in Transition in Latin America and the Caribbean C^ Free Trade Experience in Latin America and the Caribbean

0 * A Free Trade Area with Mexico: Will U.S. Workers Lose? * Gains for the United States from Hemisphere Free Trade * Western Hemisphere Free Trade: Why Should

Latin America Be Interested? 0 Technology, Development, and Hemispheric Free Trade

CQ ' The Compatibility of Regional Economic Blocs and the GATT

OrderToday! Sage Customer Service: 805-499-9774 * Sage FaxLine: 805-499-0871

The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Volume 526 / March 1993

F * _ Softcover: Individual $18.00 / Institution $34.00 Hardcover: Individual $28.00 / Institution $40.00

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