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Reply: Argentine and Canadian Divergencies: The Contributions of Dependency and World-System Analyses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2009

Judith Teichman
Affiliation:
University of Waterloo

Abstract

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Type
Comment/Commentaire
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association (l'Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique 1982

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References

1 Teichman, Judith, “Businessmen and Politics in the Process of Economic Development: Argentina and Canada,” this JOURNAL 15 (1982), 4766.Google Scholar

2 Remmer, Karen L., “Economic Dependency and Political Conflict: Chile and Argentina, 1900–1925,” Studies in Comparative International Development 11 (1976), 324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 Remmer admits that “these findings do not prove that public policy actually promoted industrialization” (ibid., 17).

4 See Teichman, “Businessmen and Politics,” 61, n. 42.

5 For a discussion of the entrepreneurial alliances which propelled sharp oscillations in economic policy, see Guillermo O'Donnell, “Estado y Alliances en la Argentina 1956–1976,” Desarrollo Economico 16/64 (1977), and my refinement of O'Donnell's analysis (“The Argentine Industrial Bourgoisie: Economic Strategies and Alliances after the Fall of Peron,” to appear in North South, Canadian Journal of Latin American and Carribean Studies [September 1982]).

6 Malcolm Alexander, “The Political Economy of Semi-Industrial Capitalism: A Comparative Study of Argentina, Australia and Canada, 1950–1970” (unpublished doctoral dissertation, McGill University, 1979), 1.

7 Ibid., 21–22.

8 Alexander experienced difficulties in the comparability of data, a problem endemic to this sort of exercise.

9 Alexander, “The Political Economy of Semi-Industrial Capitalism,” 200,242, 253 and 260.