74 research outputs found

    Social change and the family: Comparative perspectives from the west, China, and South Asia

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    This paper examines the influence of social and economic change on family structure and relationships: How do such economic and social transformations as industrialization, urbanization, demographic change, the expansion of education, and the long-term growth of income influence the family? We take a comparative and historical approach, reviewing the experiences of three major sociocultural regions: the West, China, and South Asia. Many of the changes that have occurred in family life have been remarkably similar in the three settings—the separation of the workplace from the home, increased training of children in nonfamilial institutions, the development of living arrangements outside the family household, increased access of children to financial and other productive resources, and increased participation by children in the selection of a mate. While the similarities of family change in diverse cultural settings are striking, specific aspects of change have varied across settings because of significant pre-existing differences in family structure, residential patterns of marriage, autonomy of children, and the role of marriage within kinship systems.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/45661/1/11206_2005_Article_BF01124383.pd

    Bangladesh and the Crises of Pakistan

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    The cyclonic fury with which the Pakistan Amy struck against the people of East Bengal exactly two years to the day on which the regime of President Ayub Khan had fallen and General Yahya Khan assumed power under Martial Law, marked a new stage in the deepening crisis of Pakistan. It is a crisis of national identity. It is also a crisis of the challenges which are being posed by the rising democratic forces in the country to the ruling bureaucratic-military oligarchy

    Imperialism Old And New

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    "Imperialism is the eve of the socialist revolution," wrote Lenin whilst revolutionary hearts were still warm with the apocalyptic vision of the social transformation that was about to take place following the disintegration of moribund capitalism. Monopoly capitalism was in the last throes of its general crisis; imperialism was the highest stage of its development. National liberation movements in colonial territories were an important part of the revolutionary process, for they undermined the positions of imperialism and intensified its contradictions

    Colonial Social Formations: The Indian Case

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    India and the Colonial Mode of Production

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    Important issues have been raised by Indian Marxist agricultural economists in a debate about 'The Mode of Production in Indian Agriculture'.' That debate is taking place in the context of far-reaching changes that have taken place in Indian agriculture in recent years; changes that were once celebrated as 'The Green Revolution'. Today, its conservative authors as well as its radical critics are compelled, by the force of the contradictions in rural class relations (as well as in the economy as a whole) that have been brought to the surface as a consequence, to move beyond the limits of justification or condemnation, to analyse and assess the nature and significance of the structural changes that have been brought about

    La India y el modo colonial de producción

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