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Peasants, Planters, and the Predatory State: Export Diversification in the Dominican Republic, 1970–2000

Nature, Raw Materials, and Political Economy

ISBN: 978-0-76231-162-0, eISBN: 978-1-84950-314-3

Publication date: 26 October 2005

Abstract

What are the social and ecological roots of export diversification in the developing world? On the one hand, I attribute the growth of nontraditional, manufactured exports from the Dominican Republic to the traditional agro-export elite's use of free trade zones to offset the consequences of urban biased, import-substituting industrialization in the 1970s, and thereby portray diversification as an incremental response to government predation rather than a coherent product of government planning. On the other hand, I hold that the nature, timing, and location of the nontraditional export supply response have necessarily been circumscribed by preexisting social and ecological circumstances, and thereby underscore the structural impediments to similar diversification efforts elsewhere in the developing world. My findings are of both theoretical relevance and policy import, for they serve to underscore the limitations to the regnant neoliberal development orthodoxy as well as the available sociological alternatives.

Citation

Schrank, A. (2005), "Peasants, Planters, and the Predatory State: Export Diversification in the Dominican Republic, 1970–2000", Ciccantell, P.S., Smith, D.A. and Seidman, G. (Ed.) Nature, Raw Materials, and Political Economy (Research in Rural Sociology and Development, Vol. 10), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 353-371. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1057-1922(05)10016-X

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited