|
|
Current Issue #52
Vol 24, No. 1
For
texts of articles published within the past year, please contact us
(info@sdonline.org)
about buying a copy of the journal, or else
contact our publishers through their website: www.tandf.co.uk/journals
______________
Table of Contents
______________
52
(Volume 24, No. 1)
Cuban
Perspectives on Cuban Socialism
Preface
by
The Editors
Introduction, by Alfredo
Prieto
Rafael Hernández, Revolution/Reform and Other Cuban
Dilemmas
Juan Valdés Paz, Cuba: The Left in Government,
1959-2008
Emilio Duharte Díaz, Cuba at the Onset of the
21st Century: Socialism, Democracy, and Political Reforms
Omar Everleny Pérez Villanueva and Pavel
Vidal Alejandro, Cuba’s Economy: A Current Evaluation
and Several Necessary Proposals
Mayra Espina, Looking at Cuba Today: Four Assumptions
and Six Intertwined Problems
María del Carmen Zabala Argüelles, Poverty
and Vulnerability in Cuba Today
Marta Núñez Sarmiento, Cuban Development
Strategies and Gender Relations
Aurelio Alonso, Religion in Cuba’s Socialist
Transition
Rodrigo Espina Prieto and Pablo Rodríguez
Ruiz, Race and Inequality in Cuba Today
Notes on Contributors

Designed
& Powered by MediaTEK Consulting
|
|
|
|
Notes on Contributors
Mat Callahan is a musician and author from San Francisco
who currently resides in Bern, Switzerland. His musical work includes
award-winning albums and collaborations such as founding legendary artists'
collective Komotion International. He is the author of numerous books
and articles, most recently The Trouble with Music (AK Press, 2006). <www.matcallahan.com>;
<info@matcallahan.com>
Hester Eisenstein is a professor of sociology at Queens
College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York, and a member
of the S&D editorial board. Her books include Contemporary Feminist
Thought (1983), Inside Agitators: Australian Femocrats and the State (1996),
and Feminism Seduced: How Global Elites Are Using Women’s Labor
and Ideas to Exploit the World (2009). She has taught at Yale University,
Barnard College (Columbia University), and the State University of New
York at Buffalo; she also has served as a “femocrat” in the
state government of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. <hester1@prodigy.net>
Andrew Kliman, author of Reclaiming Marx's "Capital":
A refutation of the myth of inconsistency (Lexington Books, 2007), is
a professor of economics at Pace University in New York, and co-editor
(with Alan Freeman) of Critique of Political Economy, a new online scholarly
journal. His writings, talks, and interviews on the current economic crisis
are archived at
<www.akliman.squarespace.com/crisis-intervention>
<akliman@pace.edu>
Joel Kovel is the author, most recently, of Overcoming
Zionism (Pluto) and The Enemy of Nature (Zed). He is active in the movements
of Palestinian solidarity and ecosocialism. <jskovel@earthlink.net>
D. H. Melhem, poet, novelist, and scholar, is preparing
her eighth poetry collection. Working title: “Art and Politics /
Politics and Art.” For bio, see S&D #48 and www.dhmelhem.com.
<dhmelhem@worldnet.att.net>
Gregory Meyerson is co-editor of the Marxist online journal,
Cultural Logic, and has published numerous essays on Marxism, critical
race theory, post-structuralism and American literature. He is coauthor
with Michael Roberto of It Could Happen Here: Fascism and the Decline
of the American Empire, forthcoming from Pluto Press. He teaches critical
theory, American and African American literature, as well as composition
at North Carolina A & T University. <gmeyerson@triad.rr.com>
Rohit Negi is a graduate student in Geography at Ohio State University.
His interests are in historical materialism and postcolonial studies.
His dissertation research concerns the economic geography of copper mining
in Zambia, its articulations with the state, and (uneven) developmental
impacts. <negi.2@osu.edu>
Michael Joseph Roberto is Assistant Professor of History
at North Carolina A & T State University, where he teaches contemporary
world history and the history of socialism. With Gregory Meyerson, he
is co-author of It Could Happen Here: Fascism and the Decline of the American
Empire and “Fascism and the Crisis of Pax Americana” (S&D
#47). He has a forthcoming article on Marx’s concept of progress
in Science & Society, and is also writing a political biography of
H. Smith Richardson, a major backer of conservative political initiatives
in the US. <robertom@ncat.edu>
Jonathan Scott is the author of Socialist Joy in the
Writing of Langston Hughes, as well as many articles on literature, culture,
and politics. His study of the great Palestinian writer, Emile Habiby,
is part of a new collection entitled Embargoed Literatures. He is a professor
of writing and literature at Bronx Community College. <jonascott15@aol.com>
Jeffrey Shantz is a long time community organizer and
rank-and-file union activist. He was for several years a member of the
Ontario Coalition Against Poverty and host of the “Anti-Poverty
Report” on community radio. He currently teaches at Kwantlen Polytechnic
University in Vancouver and is helping organize against the 2010 Winter
Olympics in Vancouver and Whistler.
<der_einzige@hotmail.com>
George Snedeker teaches at the State University of New
York/College at Old Westbury. He has published scholarly articles in the
areas of sociology and literary criticism as well as short stories and
poems. His book, The Politics of Critical Theory, was published by Rowman
& Littlefield in 2004. <snedekerg@verizon.net>
George Wallace is author of eighteen poetry chapbooks
and two CDs, and editor of numerous poetry publications. He is a frequent
performer nationally and internationally. He has appeared at the Beat
Museum, Woody Guthrie Festival, Howlfest, Shakespeare & Co, and the
Dylan Thomas Centre. Winner of the CW Post Poetry Prize and the Poetry
Kit Best Book award, he curates poetry reading series at the Bowery Poetry
Club and Cornelia Street Café in New York. In 2003 he was named
the first poet laureate of Suffolk County NY. <poetrybay1@aol.com>
Victor Wallis, the managing editor of Socialism and Democracy,
teaches in the department of Liberal Arts at the Berklee College of Music.
His writings on ecology and technology have also appeared in Capitalism
Nature Socialism, Monthly Review, Organization & Environment, and
the Historisch-Kritisches Wörterbuch des Marxismus, and have been
translated into nine languages. <zendive@aol.com>
Nadya
Williams visited Viet Nam for three months in early 2008. She
is a former Asia study-tour coordinator for Global Exchange (a San Francisco-based
human rights organization). She is an active associate member of Veterans
for Peace, San Francisco chapter, and an associate member of Vietnam Veterans
Against the War. She is on the national board of the New York-based Vietnam
Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility Campaign. Her first demonstration
against the Viet Nam war was in 1963 at the University of California at
Berkeley. <nadyanomad@gmail.com>
Richard D. Wolff is Professor of Economics Emeritus at
the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He is also Visiting Professor
at the Graduate Program in International Affairs of the New School University
in New York. His most recent work, with Stephen Resnick, includes New
Departures in Marxian Theory (2006) and a documentary film on the current
capitalist crisis, “Capitalism Hits the Fan” (www.mediaed.org;
www.capitalismhitsthefan.com).
He also writes regular short pieces of current economic analysis for the
Monthly Review webzine at www.monthlyreview.org/mrzine.com
<rdwolff@worldnet.att.net>
Raúl Zibechi is editor of the International Section
of the weekly Brecha (Montevideo); he also writes for La Jornada (Mexico
City) and the International Relations Center (Silver City, NM). He received
the 2003 Jose Martí Award from Prensa Latina (Cuba). He is a professor
and researcher at the Popular Education Center of the Multiversidad Franciscana
de América Latina. He is the author of several books on Latin American
social movements, most recently Autonomías y emancipaciones: América
Latina en movimiento (Mexico: Bajo Tierra, 2008). <zibechi@internet.com.uy>
|