The South American Pipeline (Radio Interview with Jonathan Nitzan)

dc.contributor.authorMcIntryre, Linden
dc.contributor.authorNitzan, Jonathan
dc.date.accessioned2022-11-25T22:29:38Z
dc.date.available2022-11-25T22:29:38Z
dc.date.issued2006
dc.descriptioncapitalism energy pink revolution regionalism social cosmology socialism South America Washington Consensus
dc.description.abstractDuration: 11 minutes FROM THE INTERVIEW: It's not by chance that President Chavez calls this pipeline project the beginning of a "South American consensus", something that could economically link that continent's countries. Using that term is seen a direct challenge to the once-championed "Washington Consensus", which referred to a Free Trade Area for the Americas--one that was supposed to extend NAFTA from Alaska to Patagonia. Now some observers say the pipeline points to a Latin America poised to exclude American political and economic influence from the region. To help us sort through the rhetoric, and to put the proposed pipeline into a continental and global context, we were joined by Jonathan Nitzan. He is a Political Economist at York University in Toronto, but this morning, he was in Montreal.
dc.identifier.citationThe South American Pipeline (Radio Interview with Jonathan Nitzan). McIntryre, Linden and Nitzan, Jonathan. (2006). The Current, CBC Radio. February. (Interview; English).
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/40341
dc.titleThe South American Pipeline (Radio Interview with Jonathan Nitzan)
dc.typeOther

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