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Labour-Centred Development in Latin America: Two cases of alternative development
Institution:1. De Montfort University, Leicester LE1 9BH, UK;2. International Relations and Global Development, Centre for Global Political Economy, University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9SJ, UK;1. State Key Laboratory of Loess and Quaternary Geology, Institute of Earth Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xi''an 710061, China;2. Xi''an AMS Center, Xi''an 710061, China;3. Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, China;4. Key Laboratory of Tibetan Environment Changes and Land Surface Process, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China;5. Excellence Center for Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China;1. School of Civil Engineering, Huaqiao University, Xiamen, Fujian Province 361021, China;2. Institute of Geotechnical Engineering, Transportation College, Southeast University, Nanjing, Jiangsu Province 210096, China;3. Key Laboratory for Structural Engineering and Disaster Prevention of Fujian Province, Xiamen, Fujian Province 361021, China;1. The Alan Turing Institute, United Kingdom;2. Centre for Science and Technology Studies, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Abstract:The ‘pink tide’ in Latin America is drawing increasing criticisms from the political left for its inability to confront existing socio-structural inequalities. This article contributes to these debates in two ways. First, as a means of understanding better the development strategies that have been followed by left-leaning governments, it highlights and critiques what it labels Elite Development Theory (EDT) encompassing Washington Consensus and Statist Political Economy. It shows how despite its self-stated objectives – the amelioration of the conditions of the poor and their uplifting – EDT is grounded in elite assumptions about social change: States and corporations are posited as prime-movers in the development process while collective efforts of labouring classes to pursue their own developmental strategies are ignored and/or de-legitimated. Exploitation, oppression and the ideological delegitimation of labouring class collective actions form the core of EDT. The second contribution of this article is to argue for an alternative form of what it terms Labour-Centred Development (LCD). This argument is supported through an examination of the Chilean cordones industriales and Argentinian empresas recuperadas por sus trabajadores (ERT) movements. The article concludes that whilst LCD may be a rarity, its existence offers the basis for alternative development theory and strategy.
Keywords:Labour-Centred Development  Elite-development theory  Labouring classes  Argentina  Chile
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