Understanding Third World Politics

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Preface


This second edition has been extensively revised in order to sharpen its
focus and reflect the current preoccupations in the study of Third World pol-
itics, especially the potential for sustainable democracy. The chapters on
military intervention, bureaucracy and political parties have been revised to
enable the implications which these institutions have for processes of
democratization to be explored. The old chapter on political stability has
been divided into two so that proper attention can be paid to theories of
democratic transition and consolidation. The Conclusion contains a discus-
sion on whether democracy or authoritarianism is preferable for a poor
country trying to develop economically and socially.
The provision of a critical introduction to the attempts of political scien-
tists to understand the politics of less developed countries remains the main
purpose of the book. While it provides a very wide range of empirical exam-
ples from many countries in several continents its central focus is on the
issues and controversies that have dominated the social science of Third
World politics since the 1950s and in particular on assessing the main theo-
ries that have been formulated that attempt to make systematic and rigorous
sense of political change.
The book commences with discussions of two topics that are an essential
preparation for what follows: the question of whether there is a ‘Third
World’; and the colonial backgrounds of most of today’s less developed
countries. To identify the types of society with which the book is concerned
Chapter 1 deals with the concept of a ‘third’ world. Different terminology is
used to label the countries and the circumstances in which they find them-
selves – developing, underdeveloped, poor, less developed – as well as
‘Third World’. These are not synonyms but denote interpretations of history.
The significance of labels is that they define subjects for analysis. So
Chapter 1 distinguishes the different meanings that have been attached to
the term ‘Third World’, to explain why doubts have been expressed about
the legitimacy of such a label. This also introduces the main socio-
economic problems facing Third World countries and the major changes
that have taken place since the end of the Second World War.
An understanding of imperialism is necessary not only to know the nature
of one of the most formative historical influences on today’s Third World,


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