Latin America: from Dependence to RevolutionWiley, 1973 - 274 pages |
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Page 50
... workers ' involvement ; courses in workers ' management were established ; more important , the executive began to move toward the development of a consejo directivo ( executive council ) , which would include five representatives ...
... workers ' involvement ; courses in workers ' management were established ; more important , the executive began to move toward the development of a consejo directivo ( executive council ) , which would include five representatives ...
Page 52
... workers and employees are capable of running the enterprise . We are not obreros ( manual workers ) or empleados ( white collar workers ) but trabajadores ( a general term , " one who works ” ) . I participate in all the meetings and ...
... workers and employees are capable of running the enterprise . We are not obreros ( manual workers ) or empleados ( white collar workers ) but trabajadores ( a general term , " one who works ” ) . I participate in all the meetings and ...
Page 53
... workers . The skilled workers were more likely than their unskilled companeros to take a " longer view " of the process and to see the whole process . There are articulate class - conscious workers among the semiskilled or unskilled workers ...
... workers . The skilled workers were more likely than their unskilled companeros to take a " longer view " of the process and to see the whole process . There are articulate class - conscious workers among the semiskilled or unskilled workers ...
Contents
ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES | 7 |
Nationalization Socioeconomic | 41 |
Jose Serra the Nature of Recent Developments | 61 |
Copyright | |
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activities Allende government Alliance Alliance for Progress analysis anti-Communism areas Argentine Argentine executives Bank Brazil Brazilian capitalist Chile Chilean Christian Democratic Chuquicamata Communist copper corporations countries Cuba Cuban dynamic economic nationalism El Mercurio elections elite enterprises expansion exports expropriation favor financing forces foreign capital foreign executives foreign firms foreign investment Frei Getulio Vargas government's groups hegemony hemisphere important income increase industrialists Inter-American Inter-American Development Bank intervention investors issue James Petras labor Latin America loans major ment military million mining modern Monroe Doctrine national executives national firms Neighbor Policy nondependent officials opposed organization participation peasant percent period policy vehicle political position product-capital relationship production regime relations response Roosevelt Corollary sectors social socialist surplus TABLE tion trade union U.S. business U.S. Department U.S. economic U.S. imperialism U.S. investment U.S. policy makers United Votes wage Washington workers