Tanzania: The Silent Class Struggle |
Contents
CONTENTS | 4 |
Walter Rodney SOME IMPLICATIONS OF THE QUESTION | 49 |
Thomas Szentes STATUS QUO AND SOCIALISM | 61 |
1 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
analysis antagonistic contradiction Arusha Declaration basic bourgeois Brooke Bond bureaucratic capitalism capitalist capitalist countries Cement cent changes Cheche co-operation colonial companies Dar es Salaam developing countries disengagement division of labour economic bureaucracy elite exploitation export fact foreign capital foreign partners Group hand ideological imperialism important income independent industrial interests international bourgeoisie international corporations international division Jenga John Saul Kenya latter leadership means ment million mode of production monopoly capitalism Motor Mart national bourgeoisie national capital nationalisation neo-colonial neo-colony par excellence oisie organisation ownership parastatals partnership Party petty petty-bourgeoisie pounds private capital problem production process production relations productive forces profit question raw materials role sector Shivji Silent Class Struggle social base socialist socialist development society socio-economic formation status quo stratum subsidiaries Tanganyika TANU Tanzania Tanzanian economy tendencies tion tourist type of neo-colonial Ujamaa underdeveloped countries velopment Walter Rodney workers and peasants