- Provides an overarching historical and geographical analysis of the region combined with a focus on many important themes and issues of contemporary Latin American development.
- Introduces readers to the politics, economies, and cultures of Latin America, outlining the region's key development challenges, the diverse ways in which its peoples are responding to such challenges and ways in which such challenges and responses can be theorized.
- Existing competition is either dated, lacks a consistent focus on development or else lacks the student friendly pedagogy of the text.
- Empirical information and analysis is drawn from all areas of the region and includes the majority of important events over an extended period of time, but especially in recent years.
- Focus on transformations provides a unifying theme and focuses the text and provides a useful avenue for engaging students.
Key Changes for the New Edition
- The entire text will be revised and updated in a way that takes into account changes that have taken place since publication (deaths of leaders, elections of new leaders, retreat of Pink Tide, Colombian peace accords, new forms of social mobilization, the intensification of extractivism, murders of environmental defenders, major disasters, the new contours of feminist and anti-patriarchal struggles).
- All of the boxes will be replaced with new and more recent examples, as will many of the photos, illustrations and web resources.
- The new edition will feature new chapters on conceptual underpinnings, Latin America and the World, Disastrous Development, Afro-descendent Struggles and the Latin American City.
- The chapters will also be reordered so that the theoretical approaches covered in the text are foregrounded and so the new edition will start with the key theoretical approaches to be covered (especially decolonial theory) and then the theory will be drawn upon throughout.
- There is also a need for nuanced analysis of contemporary and highly polarizing events that students are seeking to understand (in particular, what went wrong in Venezuela or whether what is going on in Bolivia is a coup) so there will be good coverage of these aspects.
Julie Cupples is Professor of Human Geography and Cultural Studies at the University of Edinburgh, UK. She has been working in Latin America since 1990 and has done research in Nicaragua, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Colombia, including the San Andres Archipelago. Her publications have dealt with a range of themes including revolution and conflict, Indigenous and Afrodescendant media practices, gender and sexuality, elections, and disasters and environmental risk.
Title: Development and Decolonization in Latin America (Routledge Perspectives on Development)
Author: Cupples, Julie
ISBN: 9780367627089
Binding:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publication Date: 2021-02-26
Number of Pages: 354
Weight: 0.5502 kg