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POLI 227 Lecture 4 Notes

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POLI 227 Lecture 4 Notes - Political Economic Inequality

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  • January 26, 2021
  • 7
  • 2018/2019
  • Class notes
  • Daniel doeuk
  • Class 4
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Lecture 4 - Jan. 14th, 2019
Modernization and Dependency: Competing Theories

Lecture Notes
*last class: role of the state, states’ formations/trajectories
Western scholarship sought to understand where developing countries would fit into the
global economy.
Dependency theory emerged directly as a response and as a critique of modernization
theory.

, Modernization Theory
- Modernization theory emerged among Western policymakers and scholars in the
1950s
- Recall: post-WWII was a key period for the emergence of countries in the
‘developing world’
- It was clear they could not compete with the economies of developed
country
- The idea emerged that perhaps there was a way to help the developing
countries “catch up” to the developed ones
- Prescribed a formula for newly-independent countries to modernize.
- Aimed to transform ​economies​ as well as ​societies​ and ​value systems
- I.e. facilitate the conditions that would be suitable for the emergence of
democracy
- Modernization theorists tended to view economic development and
democratic evolution as going hand in hand
- Many mainstream assumptions reflected in mass media today are actually
shaped by modernization theory

Elements of Modernization Theory

Traditional Society
- Rural
- Agrarian
- Tended to rely on agriculture as main economic engine/means of
production
- Bound by custom, religion
- This was seen as a hindrance to entering a capitalist market economy
- United by clan ties, extended family
- Little or no upward mobility
- I.e. if you are living in a rural farming area, your horizon tends to be the
same as your parents before you
- Lack of access to education
- Many people were semi-literate or illiterate
- Often was in the context of religious education, not how to succeed in a
market economy, etc
- Economy based on “​primary​” forms of production

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