Foreword / Stephen Resnick / Richard Wolff
1. Rethinking planning, development, and globalization from a Marxian perspective
2. Essentialism and socialist economic planning: A methodological critique of optimal planning theory
3. Planning and class in transitional societies
4. The state and planning in Nicaragua
5. State, class, and transition in Nicaragua
6. Radical theories of development: Frank, the Modes of Production school, and Amin
7. The costs of austerity in Nicaragua: The worker-peasant alliance (1979-87)
8. When failure becomes success: Class and the debate over stabilization and adjustment
9. Power and class: The contribution of radical approaches to debt and development
10. Capitalism and industrialization in the Third World: Recognizing the costs and imagining alternatives
11. "After" development: Reimagining economy and class
12. Reading Harold: Class analysis, capital accumulation, and the role of the intellectual
13. Fordism on a world scale: International dimensions of regulation
14. Class beyond the nation-state
15. Global fragments: Subjectivity and class politics in discourses of globalization
16. Globalization and imperialism