The year 1982 began with a revolutionary upheaval in Ghana: a group of young and radical military officers—some retired, others still in service—appeared to have seized power!
Global South
- Tagged under Global South Tribute to Samir Amin
Every problem provides an opportunity for a progressive to work on eradicating the problem in the drive to move society forward for the better. In this case, the problem is the vacuum created by the passing away of Professor Samir Amin.
Tagged under Global South Tribute to Samir AminHe walked in the corridors of our brand-new National Research Institute (Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisa—INEP) in Bissau, as if he knew the place for a long time.
Tagged under Global South Tribute to Samir AminDear comrades, Dear activists, Dear workers,
Tagged under Global South Tribute to Samir AminMarx is a giant thinker, not for the 19th century, but even more for understanding our contemporary time. No other attempt to develop an understanding of society has been as fertile.
Tagged under Global South Tribute to Samir AminMarx is a giant thinker, not for the 19th century, but even more for understanding our contemporary time. No other attempt to develop an understanding of society has been as fertile.
Tagged under Global South Tribute to Samir Amin1. The financial facets of globalisation
Tagged under Global South Tribute to Samir AminSamir Amin stands within the intellectual canon of African revolutionary thinkers whose gargantuan and prodigious lifetime’s work is invaluable to all human beings who seek to eliminate the predatory, devastating impact of capitalism in our times.
Tagged under Global South Tribute to Samir Amin“We are thus at the point where in order to open up a new field for the expansion of capital (modernisation of agricultural production) it would be necessary to destroy – in human terms – entire societies.
Tagged under Global South Tribute to Samir AminIt was 1973. My sequel to the first essay Tanzania: The Silent Class Struggle, called “The class struggle continues” (which later became Class Struggles in Tanzania) was making rounds of comrades “underground” in a mimeograph form.
Tagged under Global South Tribute to Samir Amin
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