Development geography and the third-world state
- 1 April 1997
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Progress in Human Geography
- Vol. 21 (2) , 164-198
- https://doi.org/10.1191/030913297667309393
Abstract
Soon after the third-world state was declared impotent, contradictory evidence pointing to the importance of state leadership in development in the Asian miracles came to the fore. This article, through a critical review of the literature, pushes this argument further and claims that geographers have much to contribute to the analysis of the state and its role in development. An appropriate framework for this kind of work is a marriage of radical political economy and certain strands of neo-Weberianism. We suggest that this conceptual union allows for broad theorizing of the capitalist state in the periphery while minding the institutional details of third-world states in particular regions and countries. This approach can help explain the differential performances of various third-world states within the confines of the world system. Thailand and Botswana are used as comparative cases to demonstrate the utility of this framework.Keywords
This publication has 73 references indexed in Scilit:
- A State of Uncertainty: Political Economy of Community Resource Management at Tab Salao, ThailandJournal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia, 1995
- World-state formation: historical processes and emergent necessityPolitical Geography Quarterly, 1990
- Global Regulation vs. the Nation-State: Agro-Food Systems and the New Politics of CapitalReview of Radical Political Economics, 1990
- The Role of Women in the International Division of Labour: The Case of ThailandDevelopment and Change, 1989
- The agrarian question in Africa: debating the crisisProgress in Human Geography, 1989
- Explaining the state and state—society relations in Africa: what are the crucial variables?Political Geography Quarterly, 1987
- Geopolitics, generals and the state in BrazilPolitical Geography Quarterly, 1986
- State and spatial aspects of industrialization in post-Independence IndiaPolitical Geography Quarterly, 1986
- An exploration into world-systems analysis of political partiesPolitical Geography Quarterly, 1986
- Politics, the state and agrarian development: a comparative study of Nigeria and the Ivory CoastPolitical Geography Quarterly, 1986