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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 October 2022
I wish to acknowledge the assistance of my colleague, Charles Sackrey.
1. Laura Randall, “Symposium: Energy Policy in Latin America,” LARR 17, no. 3 (1982):119-72; see in particular James Street, “Coping with Energy Shocks in Latin America: Three Responses,” 128-47. See also Manas Chatterji and R. Peter DeWitt, Jr., “Problems of Latin American Energy,” in Energy and Environment in Developing Countries, edited by Manas Chatterji (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1981), 325-26; and Althea L. Duersten and Arpad von Lazar, “The Global Poor,” 265-89; and Hans-Eckert Scharrer, “Burdens of Debt, the New Protectionism,” 290-319 in Global Insecurity, edited by Daniel Yergin and Martin Hillenbrand (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1982).
2. Inter-American Development Bank, Economic and Social Progress in Latin America: Economic Integration (Washington: IADB, 1984), 201.
3. Ibid., 468-72, tables 66-69.
4. Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres and Wolfgang Rudig, “Nuclear Power in Argentina and Brazil,” special issue on energy of the Review of Radical Political Economy 15, no. 3 (Fall 1983):67-82.
5. Ibid., 74.
6. Amory B. and Hunter Lovins, Energy War: Breaking the Nuclear Link (San Francisco: Friends of the Earth, 1980), 128.
7. Ibid., 130.
8. Ibid., 134.
9. Richard Barnet, The Lean Years (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1980), 98.
10. Osvaldo Sunkel, “Development Styles and the Environment: An Interpretation of the Latin American Case,” in From Dependency to Development: Strategies to Overcome Underdevelopment and Inequality, edited by Heraldo Muñoz (Boulder: Westview, 1981), 96.
11. Joy Dunkerley, William Ramsay, Lincoln Gordon, and Elizabeth Cecelski, Energy Strategies for Developing Nations (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1981), 241.
12. National Energy Planning and Management in Developing Nations, edited by H. Neu and D. Bain (Boston: D. Riedel, 1982); see the articles by Pierre Vernet, 195-222.
13. Energy Policy and Third World Development, edited by Pradip K. Ghosh (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1984).
14. R. S. Ganapathy, “The Political Economy of Rural Energy Planning in the Third World,” Review of Radical Political Economy 15, no. 3 (Fall 1983):93.
15. Osvaldo Sunkel, “Development Styles and the Environment,” 109.
16. Michael Tanzer, “Stealing the Third World's Nonrenewable Resources: The Lessons from Brazil,” Monthly Review 36, no. 11 (April 1984):26-35.
17. See Dilmus James and James Street, “Technology, Institutions, and Public Policy in the Age of Energy Substitution: The Case of Latin America,” Journal of Economic Issues 17, no. 2 (June 1983):521-28; Stephen C. Stamos, Jr., “A Critique of James and Street's ‘Technology, Institutions, and Public Policy in the Age of Energy Substitution: The Case of Latin America’,” Journal of Economic Issues 17, no. 3 (Sept. 1983):745-50; and James Street, “Rejoinder to S. C. Stamos's Critique of ‘Technology, Institutions, and Public Policy in the Age of Energy Substitution: The Case of Latin America’,” Journal of Economic Issues 17, no. 4 (Dec. 1983):1120-25.