A common characteristic of studies of development emanating from advanced capitalist countries is the use of descriptive rather than structural categorisations. A celebrated example from the discipline of economics is Rostow's schema whereby individual countries are placed in one of five supposedly sequential "stages of economic growth" depending on the presence or absence of certain characteristics. According to this formulation, there is no basic distinction between "developed" and "underdeveloped" countries. Instead, there exists a "continuum" of development ;anging from "least" to "most" developed
Ireland’s economic boom from 1994 to 2000 (from which the term ‘Celtic Tiger’ was coined) has gener...
Few nineteenth-century formulations of Ireland's suffering under British rule were as explicit as t...
In this article, we explore the possibility that Marx had a far more complex understanding of the c...
A common characteristic of studies of development emanating from advanced capitalist countries is ...
Dependence and underdevelopment are the results of the penetration of capitalism into societies whi...
In surveying a document that Marx wrote for a speech on Ireland (November 1867) a dialectical analy...
Spatial unevenness has been a consistent feature of capitalist development since its original rise ...
The first chapter situates debate on social change in Ireland within the context of the debate on th...
Ireland’s economic boom from 1994 to 2000 (widely labeled the ‘Celtic Tiger’) has been seen by analy...
Summary Students of development may use diverse definitions of development and underdevelopment, bu...
The partition of Ireland into two separate political jurisdictions in 1922 reflected the very differ...
Having critically examined the dominant approaches to the study of development now current in Irish ...
The sociology of development has been dominated by the controversy about whether foreign penetration...
This paper argues that the partition of Ireland has not only contributed to over seventy years of po...
Drawing upon recent reworkings of world systems theory and Marx’s concept of metabolic rift, this p...
Ireland’s economic boom from 1994 to 2000 (from which the term ‘Celtic Tiger’ was coined) has gener...
Few nineteenth-century formulations of Ireland's suffering under British rule were as explicit as t...
In this article, we explore the possibility that Marx had a far more complex understanding of the c...
A common characteristic of studies of development emanating from advanced capitalist countries is ...
Dependence and underdevelopment are the results of the penetration of capitalism into societies whi...
In surveying a document that Marx wrote for a speech on Ireland (November 1867) a dialectical analy...
Spatial unevenness has been a consistent feature of capitalist development since its original rise ...
The first chapter situates debate on social change in Ireland within the context of the debate on th...
Ireland’s economic boom from 1994 to 2000 (widely labeled the ‘Celtic Tiger’) has been seen by analy...
Summary Students of development may use diverse definitions of development and underdevelopment, bu...
The partition of Ireland into two separate political jurisdictions in 1922 reflected the very differ...
Having critically examined the dominant approaches to the study of development now current in Irish ...
The sociology of development has been dominated by the controversy about whether foreign penetration...
This paper argues that the partition of Ireland has not only contributed to over seventy years of po...
Drawing upon recent reworkings of world systems theory and Marx’s concept of metabolic rift, this p...
Ireland’s economic boom from 1994 to 2000 (from which the term ‘Celtic Tiger’ was coined) has gener...
Few nineteenth-century formulations of Ireland's suffering under British rule were as explicit as t...
In this article, we explore the possibility that Marx had a far more complex understanding of the c...