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Índice
The Communist Party | 306 |
The Ruling Elite | 307 |
Party Membership | 315 |
The Communist Youth Union | 321 |
Functions of the Communist Party | 323 |
Internal Party Structure | 330 |
Party Schools | 336 |
The Partys Claim to Rule | 337 |
| 54 | |
| 58 | |
| 66 | |
| 71 | |
| 72 | |
| 76 | |
| 80 | |
The Purposes of Government | 84 |
Political Cleavages and Parties | 95 |
The Breakdown of the Political System | 110 |
The Politics of Breakdown | 123 |
International Influences Society and the Economy | 137 |
Hegemony and Revolutionary Politics | 139 |
Social Mobilization through Education | 165 |
The Economy and Social Welfare | 173 |
Establishing a New Government | 191 |
Government Authority and the Centralization of Power | 193 |
Structuring Revolutionary Politics | 206 |
The Formation of the Communist Party | 210 |
Social Bases and Political Purposes | 218 |
Social Effects of Redistribution | 221 |
Bureaucratization and Social Change | 233 |
The Constitution of 1976 and the Formalization of the State | 243 |
The Law and the Courts | 249 |
Mass Political Participation | 260 |
The Committees for the Defense of the Revolution | 261 |
The Cuban Womens Federation | 267 |
The Cuban Labor Confederation | 271 |
Youth Organizations | 279 |
The Political Impact of Popular Participation in Government | 281 |
Elections and Electoral Procedures | 286 |
Political Mobilization | 298 |
Measuring the Public Mood | 303 |
The Civic Soldier | 341 |
The Military Mission of the Armed Forces | 345 |
The Socioeconomic Mission of the Armed Forces | 356 |
The Political Mission of the Armed Forces | 364 |
Setting Public Policy | 381 |
Setting Economic Policy | 383 |
Setting Intellectual and Scientific Policy | 391 |
Policymaking and Social Institutions | 408 |
Legislation and Legislative Processes | 415 |
Planning for the Nation | 417 |
Agrarian Conflict and Peasant Politics | 423 |
Agrarian Conflict before the Revolution | 424 |
Revolution Revolutionary Rule and Agrarian Conflict | 435 |
The National Association of Small Peasants | 445 |
Political Culture | 464 |
Political Participation Cooperation and Individualism | 465 |
Explaining Continuity and Change after the Revolution | 472 |
Change among Students in the Early 1960s | 474 |
National Integration | 478 |
Forming the New Socialist Citizen | 485 |
Women and the Revolution | 494 |
Social Stress and Revolutionary Change | 504 |
The Impact of International Economic Factors on Internal Affairs Three Perspectives | 513 |
Changes in the Height of Cubans | 515 |
Racial Inequality in Public Health | 521 |
Textual Changes in the Draft Constitution of 1976 and the Draft Family Code | 527 |
Members of the Peoples Socialist Party in the Communist Partys Central Committee | 533 |
Cooperation among Cuban Scientists | 535 |
Notes | 541 |
Bibliography | 630 |
Index | 667 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Términos y frases comunes
administration agrarian ANAP Angola Anuario armed forces assemblies autonomy Batista Blas Roca bureaucracy Central Committee civilian Communist party Computed congress cooperation countries Court Cuba socialista Cuba's Cuban government Cuban politics Cuban revolution December delegates early economic elections elite enterprises Fidel Castro foreign Fulgencio Batista Granma Weekly Review Grau groups Havana Havana province ibid increase industry Institute January labor land leaders leadership legislation legitimacy Machado March mass organizations Matanzas Matanzas province membership ment military Ministry mulattoes officers organizational participation partido party members party's peasants percent pesos Platt Amendment Political Bureau political system population prerevolutionary President Prime Minister Castro production province Raul Castro revolution revolutionary government revolutionary rule role rural schools sector Sierra Maestra socialist Soviet Union sugar survey tion tional trade United University University of Havana Verde olivo wages women World Marxist Review Youth Union
Pasajes populares
Página 24 - Social mobilization can be defined, therefore, as the process in which major clusters of old social, economic and psychological commitments are eroded or broken and people become available for new patterns of socialization and behavior.
Página 13 - III. That the government of Cuba consents that the United States may exercise the right to intervene for the preservation of Cuban independence, the maintenance of a government adequate for the protection of life, property, and individual liberty, and for discharging the obligations with respect to Cuba imposed by the treaty of Paris on the United States, now to be assumed and undertaken by the government of Cuba.
Página 543 - Bruce M. Russett, Hayward R. Alker, Jr., Karl W. Deutsch, and Harold D. Lasswell, World Handbook of Political and Social Indicators (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1964); Richard L.
Página 602 - Robert A. Dahl and Charles E. Lindblom, Politics, Economics and Welfare, New York: Harper & Brothers, 1953; Strategy of Decision, op.
Página 543 - Social Mobilization and Political Development," American Political Science Review 55 ( September 1961 ) : 493-514; and Daniel Lemer, The Passing of Traditional Society (New York: Free Press of Glencoe, 1958).
Página 542 - Albert O. Hirschman, The Strategy of Economic Development ( New Haven: Yale University Press, 1958), p.
Página 542 - The input-provision, derived demand, or backward linkage effects, ie, every nonprimary economic activity, will induce attempts to supply through domestic production the inputs needed in that activity. 2. The output-utilization or forward linkage effects, ie, every activity that does not by its nature cater exclusively to final demands, will induce attempts to utilize its outputs as inputs in some new activities.
Página 268 - ... to women. Neither did the Compulsory Military Service Law.54 Minister of Labor Jorge Risquet explained the rationale for excluding women from the anti-loafing law: There are men and there are women. The problem isn't the same for both. Women have the job of reproducing as well as producing. That is, they have to take care of the house, raise the children and do other tasks along these lines and this is no cinch. From the political point of view our people wouldn't understand if we were to treat...

