Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Dependency Theory -
Andre Gunder Frank (1967)
- Background
- Marxist
perspective
- First emerged in South America
- Looks at the poor
periphery in development
- Disagrees with the
assumption that poverty is a
natural and inevitable
causless state.
- Global poverty and
affluence are imtimately
linked and have both
created explotiation.
- Frank conducted an historical analysis and
the phases of ecploitative relationships
- MERCANTILE
CAPITALISM
- INFORMAL TRADE NETWORKS WERE
ESTABLISHED AND EUROPEAN
CAPITALISTS GENERATED HUGE PROFITS
WHICH FUNDED INDUSTRIAL
REVOLUTIONS.
- COLONIALISM
- The informal exploitative
relationships became fomalised
under colonialism since
European powers took direct
control over the regions of the
majority world. This began
around the 16th-20th Century
and there was a scramble as
major powers tried to acquire
territory before their competitors.
- This era wrought
devastation for the
majority world.
- There was much
exploitation for cheap
labour, food and
resources and
competition from
European
manufacturers.
- Cultures become more
civilised.
- Economies and colonialism:
- Were reshaped with a
shift from divverse
agriculture to the
production of raw materials
and cash crops needed by
the empires. At the same
time, indigenous industries
collapsed unable to
compete with the empires
industrial mass production.
- Geopolitics and colonialism
- distorted as colonial powers created
nation states in the territories the had
claimed. They often broke families apart
and established corrupt government
systems
- Informal/Triangular Trade
- Slaves taken from
Africa to the
Carribbean and
were sold/replaced
with sugar, cotton
and tobacco.
- NEOCOLONIALISM
- 19th and 20th Centuries
- Exploitation hasn't been
removed but still exists today.
- Evaluation
- Crucial contribution in locating the barriers
and development and avoids blaming the
victims of poverty for their situation. The
approach blames the rich world for the
issues.
- However there are a considerable
amount of problems associated with
the theory. Firstly, it implies that the
third-world are unlikely to achieve
any form of development, the theory
is quite ambiguous as some poor
countries e.g. Ethiopia have never
been colonies and former colonies
such as Canada have wealth.
Dependency does NOT
acknowledge this.
- It is also guilty of ignoring that colonialism generated a degree of democracy.