Description
World Crisis and Underdevelopment presents a comprehensive critical theory of poverty and development, analyzing the interconnected forces of coercion, agency, and structural inequality that perpetuate global underdevelopment. David Ingram examines how historical and contemporary power dynamics, institutional arrangements, and economic systems constrain human agency and perpetuate cycles of poverty in developing nations.
Through rigorous theoretical analysis, the work challenges conventional development paradigms and offers insights into how political economy, international relations, and social structures interact to shape developmental outcomes. Ingram investigates the role of both structural coercion and individual agency in understanding underdevelopment, providing scholars and policymakers with a nuanced framework for addressing global inequality and poverty reduction.







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