A review of Peter Custers' book: Questioning Globalized Militarism: Nuclear and Military Production and Critical Economic Theory, Tulika, New Delhi, 2007
A lot has been and is being written about the current economic crisis which is staring world capitalism in its face. As the figures for estimated losses and number of unemployed are rising, the realization that this is a crises at par with if not bigger than the great depression of the 1930s is slowly setting in. What needs to be done to pull the world economy out of this downturn has become the most important question at the current conjuncture. It is in this regard that an understanding of what are the roots of this crisis is an extremely important issue. This is so because, without a correct diagnosis of the factors which are responsible, appropriate measures for ensuring a recovery from this downturn would remain elusive,writes Roshan Kishore, Ph D scholar, Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, JNU.
We are here to talk about the Agrarian Question, or rather, Agrarian Questions. The plural is important. We live in a modern world-system of unprecedented unevenness and complexity. This much, we all know. At the same time, it is no less important, I should add, to see this diversity from what Lukács once called the "point of view of totality." Writes Jason W. Moore