Autor/es
Descripción
ver mas
Colaborador
Grondona, Ana
Idioma
spa
Extent
252 p.
Derechos
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0 Internacional (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
Formato
application/pdf
Identificador
Abstract
This thesis aims to contribute to the recovery of Carlos Matus’ intellectual legacy from establishing his relationship with the debates on development styles that occurred during the sixties and seventies in Latin America. Reviewing this author’s contributions to the field of public policy studies, two “narratives” are distinguished and a critical dialogue is established with them: a tendency to identify normative planning with “development planning” and, on the other hand, to conceive Matus’ production as a “self-criticism” of Salvador Allende’s government. In tension with both readings, we try to account for the plural ways in which Matus conceived the possibility of alternative development models, styles or strategies in his first writings (1965-1983), with wide resonances to the debates on development styles. The objective is to describe these articulations by the identification of regularities between a series of documents written by Matus and another one produced within the framework of the aforementioned debates.
Título obtenido
Doctora de la Universidad de Buenos Aires en Ciencias Sociales
Institución otorgante
Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Sociales