Introduction: Brazilian Development in Historical Perspective. 1. State Planning and National Development: Political Devices for Turbulent Times. 2. Development in a Global Perspective and Brazil’s International Search for a New Historical Course. 3. The Targets Plan and the Council of Development: The Technocratic Path to Development Promotion. 4. The Higher Institute of Brazilian Studies versus the Technocrats: Development as State-Led Social Inclusion or as Market-Based Policies. 5. Economic Prosperity, Consumerism and the Business World: Development as Market-Led Growth. 6. National Development and Industrial Labor: Metalworkers, Carestia, and the Basis for a Popular Path of Development. Conclusion.
Rafael R. Ioris is Assistant Professor of Latin American History at the University of Denver. He holds a Ph.D. from Emory University in Latin American History with a concentration on Modern Brazil. His research interests include the history of political ideologies and comparative development in Latin America and U.S.-Latin America relations. He has authored and co-authored articles published in various prestigious journals including the Journal of Latin American Studies, Journal of Iberian and Latin American Research, Brazilian Journal of Political Economy, and Foro Internacional.
"This well-researched and engaging study makes a provocative case
that Brazilian developmentalism had heretofore unidentified
political consequences that shaped the nation throughout the second
half of the twentieth century and beyond. Ioris turns the
conventional wisdom on its head by locating the origins of the 1964
military coup in the developmentalism of the 1950s. This innovative
argument will no doubt spark debate on twentieth-century Brazilian
and Latin American political economy." —Joel Wolfe, University of
Massachusetts "Rafael Ioris properly dispels the notion of late
1950s Brazil as embodied in the image of a smiling Juscelino
Kubitschek overseeing the construction of Brasília and a
dispute-free march towards national development. Ioris delves into
the era’s ideological debates and the lives of working-class people
to provide us with a more realistic view of the challenges inherent
in transformative human endeavors. Ultimately, Ioris sheds critical
light on the years leading up to one of the most intriguing yet
tragic developments of modern Latin America: the overthrow of
Brazil’s democratically elected government in 1964. Ioris’s work is
a must-read for anybody wishing to comprehend Brazil’s subsequent
efforts to further project itself globally."—Kenneth P. Serbin,
University of San Diego"Drawing on a vast array of published and
archival sources, Rafael Ioris has produced a sophisticated
analysis of the debates about national development in postwar
Brazil. This study offers fresh insights into the hopes and dreams
of an impressive array of interest groups—including politicians,
technocrats, labor leaders and many others—who sought to make the
‘country of the future’ into a developed nation."—Marshall C.
Eakin, Vanderbilt University"This well-researched book offers a
rich picture of the trajectory of development in the JK years and
will serve as a valuable reference."—Thomas D. Rogers, Emory
University"Overall, the book illuminates the wide spectrum of
interpretations and meanings that scholars, policy-makers and
directly affected socio-political groups assigned to the term
‘development’. The reader gains a good sense of the lines of debate
and eventual disagreement between the different interests, manifest
in the contentious politics
of the early 1960s and the 1964 military coup."
—Oliver Dinius, University of Mississippi "Scholars of this period
in Brazilian history will welcome Ioris’s detailed explication of
the academic institutions, industry organizations, and labor groups
that vied to influence economic policy during the Kubitschek
administration."
— Eve E. Buckley, University of Delaware
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