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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
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Table of Contents
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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

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Introduction
By
The Editors
The
upswing in public attention to “socialism” continues. Although
the term is still used to scare people, it is likely in the coming years
that many more hearts and minds will be open to the idea. There is one
basic reason for this optimism: Every day more and more people become
aware of the radical disconnect between (a) the vast resources that the
US government is putting into the economy and (b) the insufficient degree
of control and of attention to popular needs that its policies embody.
The essays in this collection, although gathered and edited on short notice,
embody long years of reflection on the underlying issues. Here we need
only remind ourselves that this is still just the beginning of the real
discussion –- that is, of the discussion which will attend the birth
of a whole new movement, still to be defined. Although the corporate media
continue to grossly distort the root cause of the current economic crisis,
lavishing enormous amounts of attention on individual crooks and schemers
like Bernie Madoff while letting the prevailing system of economic and
political power off the hook, the total scale of the crisis is an intensely
powerful indictment of the economic relationships that preserve this exploitative
social order. For a new movement to gain mass force, the transparently
iniquitous economic relationships responsible for the current crisis have
to be properly explained, understood, and made part of our political consciousness.
Toward this essential task these essays were composed.
We are fully conscious of gaps in our coverage, and we hope that some
of our readers will be tempted to try to fill them. For now, we must stress
that neither the editors nor the various contributors to this collection
are necessarily of the same mind on any particular assertion made or perspective
put forward. However, the common goal remains: to get rid of the inhumane
system corrupting us all and to replace it with a fundamentally different
one –- a new social order in which the structure of power is finally
based on the needs and interests of the majority.
The Editors
We honor the memory of John M. Cammett, who passed
away last year on July 30, 2008.
Internationally known author of the pathbreaking study "Antonio Gramsci
and the Origins of Italian Communism" (1967), and dedicated socialist
activist, John was also a strong supporter of the Research Group on Socialism
and Democracy from its inception in 1984.
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