<p>“With few exceptions, scholars from Left to Right have presented simplistic accounts of the political ramifications of economic informality in the underdeveloped world. Such depictions have been curiously out of sync with the salutary influence of the ‘bringing the state back in’ scholarship of the last couple of decades or so. This volume makes a crucial contribution to the scholarly and policy literatures by emphasizing the embeddedness of informal economies in state-society arrangements that cut across local, national, and transnational terrains of the Latin American and global political economies. The volume represents essential reading for scholars, policy specialists, students, and others who seek to make sense of the politico-social consequences of deepening inequality and poverty in the contemporary world.”</p><p>—Richard Tardanico, Florida International University</p>
<p>“On the whole, the contributions to <i>Out of the Shadows</i> are persuasively argued and provide excellent empirical material on grassroots informal activities across Latin America.”</p><p>—Tina Hilgers <i>Latin American Research Review</i></p>
<p>“<i>Out of the Shadows</i> should be a central reference for those interested in the grassroots reality of neoliberalism and democracy, and its chapter by Centeno and Portes should be read by anyone interested in Latin American economies.”</p><p>—Tina Hilgers <i>Latin American Research Review</i></p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Patricia Fernández-Kelly is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Princeton University, where she also holds an appointment with the Office of Population Research.
Jon Shefner is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Tennessee.