
Socialism as Praxis: 'Second World'-'Third World' Relations and the Evolution of the Socialist Model During the Cold War
Details
Speaker: Jeremy Friedman, Harvard Business School
During the Cold War, the developing countries of the Global South, then called the “Third World,” provided a laboratory for socialist experimentation. This came at a time when anticommunist politics in the First World and bureaucratic resistance in the Second World made socialist experimentation more difficult in the Global North. What took place in the Third World, however, was not merely a struggle for aid and resources, or an attempt to propagate existing models — it was a global process of conversation and iteration about how to adapt socialism to conditions that neither Marx nor Lenin had foreseen. By the end of the Cold War, socialists the world over were mining the lessons learned in these Third World experiments as they sought to find a way forward.
Where
Louis A. Simpson International Building, Room A71
Princeton, NJ 08544, United States
Hosted By
Co-hosted with: Princeton Institute for International & Regional Studies, Program in Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies (OWNER)
Contact the organizers